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J XAVER Chickerin? DALY'S - chroniclingamerica.loc.gov · posed to see in the answer of modern...

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GUY FAWKES DAY. THB GUNPOWDER PLOT FROM TWO POINTS OF VIEW. WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? The Tredit'.i nal Story Tested by Origina! Evidence. By John Gerard. Octavo; pp. xlv. ZS&. London: Oagood, Mcllvaine & Co. WHAT THE GUNPOWDER PLOT WAB. By Sam- uel RaWson Gardiner. Octavo; pp. vili, 20s. Longman«. Greon & Co. For some timo a controversy ha* been taking place In periodicals and newspapers on the true history of the Gunpowder Plot, which, as If he were Its arch conspirator, popular tradition as¬ sociate« with the name of Ouy Fawkes To ex¬ plain the nature of that controversy is a diffi¬ cult task. For one thing, It has little relation to the popularly accredited traditions which Guy Fawkes Day perpetuate«. Tradition, or, tn other words, history. In so far as it ever establishes Itself In the popular mind, is persistently pict¬ uresque. Out of the crufio material of the rast It builds up a wonderful, diversified and brilliant spectacle of heroey», genluaes and villains.and Fawkes has been par excellence the villain of English tradition. The credulous human mind sets itself no limit in conceiving th« ramifica¬ tions of his conspiracy with his coreligionist«, and the havoc that conspiracy wemld have wrought had it not In the eleventh hour been deteoted. To understand the present contro¬ versy, however, one must dlemlss this dramatic legend from the mind. Hlatory, in «o far as the term stands for the consensus of the learned. Is pruealc: it refuses to find in Ouy Fawkes a blood relation to IUue Beard; to believe him, In any «enee, a chosen engine of the Roman Cath¬ olic Church, or to suppose that the conspiracy associated with his name was In any danger of diverting England for a moment from her Prot¬ estant career. On all these points the present controversialists are agreed. Indeed, It would be easier to define the pointe on wht.-h they are agreed thin those on which they differ. They all believe, for instance, that In the year 1603 a «mall group of Roman Cath- oftc gentlemen, one CeUsby In the forefront, and. enll«ted among his lieutenants, Thomas Percy, Francl« Treeham and Guy Fawkee. con¬ spired to «trike what they thought would be a great blow against th« then existing Protestant Ministry and Government, and that their plot Involved the use of a large amount of gun- | powder; that they entered Into this plot, not from any love of bloodshed for its own sake, but from the misguided notion that they could. profit thus the Juet cause of their coreligionists In England; that the Roman Catholic body of England never could have been got to sanction and that no faction of the Church ever did eanc- tlon the conspiracy; that though it was disclosed to at least one priest in the confessional, there no absolute proof that any priest approved it, or, except under the seal of the confessional, had cognizance of it; and that the report which j was circulated as to It« discovery Is In some particulars inadequate and disingenuous. Within the limits of thee« articles of belief in¬ genious students of history have been able to raiae three Questions: First.Did these Irresponsi¬ ble conspirators, as Is generally believed, Intend the demolition of the House of Lords at the opening of Parliament, the destruction thereby of the King, the Lords and the Commone, the capture of the only possible heirs of the throne and the declaration of e Roman Cathollo re¬ gency? Second.Does circumstantial evidence point to the connivance of two Jesuit priests. Fathers Garnet and Greenway, in the con¬ spiracy? Third-Did the Prime Minister, Salis¬ bury, us!ne Catesby and his lieutenants as dupes, originally instigate their conspiracy, or, if n>t that, direct ar.d amplify It to Its linai iss-'ie, In order to gain Justification out of the plot, for further antl-Cathoiic législation* It Is only natural that a man's rel'.RUus sym¬ pathies should Influence In some measure his consideration of these ijuestlons. but It is diffi¬ cult to see how his final decision can In any way affect his estimates of either the Roman Catholic or the Protestant Church. No rational man Judges large bodies of Christians by one priest or one Prime Minister. The enthusiastic churchman, however, does not always take this matter so phll<*>sophlcally. Some months ago an English Jesuit, Father Gerard, evidently dis¬ posed to see in the answer of modern English scholarship to these questions an Injustice to his church, put forth an honest and plausible treat- Ik lee on the other side. In this he has made out Im a strong case for the two priests. He «o ln- W tcrprets the Jesuit point of view that, at least for a time, he places the reader in intellectual sympathy with it. On this charge he tempus one to «ubstitute for the confessedly hypothetical verdict of history, which stigmatizes the men as guilty, the more lenient Scotch verdict, not proven. On the other two questions his posltlem hard to define. Though he believes Catesby and hla fellowe quite Innocent of any Intention to blow up the House of Lords, he offers no theory of hi» own to explain away their extraor¬ dinary course of action both before and after the capture of Guy Fawkes. For a perfectly Intelligible hypothesis, quite credible enough to satisfy modern English scholars, he proposts to substitute absolute Ignorance and vacuity of mind. The most he succeeds In doing Is to rais·· a suspicion that Catesby. Percy and Eawke« were not as ehrewd and subtle as they ai<» usually supposed tc have been. When he turns to the question of Sal!sbury"s responsibility for the plot, his position is still weaker. At every - opportunity he Insinuate» his charge«, but nowhere adduce« a scrap of proof to substan¬ tiate them. The only suspicion he tempts one tu entertain rests on the possibility that Salisbury sagaciously delayed the disclosure of Oatesby's purpose« till the times were ripe for It. In other words, th« etatesman may have allowed the ene¬ mies of hi» King and hi« Ministry to play Into his own handa Father Gerard's defects a student of his¬ tory are precisely those of Bhakesp« are'e do- crier*, the Baconians. He is exceeding Ingenious In discovering difficulties In accepted interpreta¬ tions of history, but most of hi« difficult!«.·« aris«· from his inability to put himself Imaginatively Into a past epoch and Judge it by its own stand¬ ards and in the light of its own circumstances. He quite forgets, for instance, that In 1606 the region about Parliament House was not the sa:¿.e frequented resort it is to-day; he forg>-ts that there was ever a time when gentlemen "f pleading address were capable of violent and dangerous conspiracy and rebellion. He seeiuj Ignorant of the fact that It was no mark of extraordinary duplicity for an official In th · days of the Stuart« to receive bribe« from fr>relgn government«. The duplicity would have lain In returning a fair equivalent. There are but a few random indicanone r>f Father Gerard's In¬ aptitude for the study of hlsu.ry. In place of a tra-nt-d historical Imagination he substitut··« an Incorrigible enthusiasm. It is thl« volume which Dr. 8. R. Gardiner has get himself to «uiswer. The rejoinder, It muet h- confused, la hard reading. Without frequent ref¬ erence to Father Gerard it would be unlntelllKl- ble. Nor is it« tone Ingratiating. On the con¬ trary, it la dry and dogmatic. Even estlmateel aa purely legal evidence, and quite apart from any questlcm of literary power and psaseasl«« appeal, Mr. Gardiner*» mon«>graph la defective, for he falls to take sufficiently in«/> account th« fact that CatboUc rnodeu or thoug-l.t are not Protestant modes of thought, and falla, therefor«, to do Justice to the morality of the Jesuit SsSfSSsee On a subject of this sort, how* ver, Dr. «¿ardim-r is by far the beat of living authorities n,. know« the fact« and their whole historical setting. is trained and naturally <v*ol headed in the In¬ terpretation of facts, and he is never tesnpted to p;ay the advocate. It ef no mtie atajalfl« cane«, therefore, thst Mr. Gardiner, though h«· Invests the conspirators with no l'Ictur'-sque uc- caeaoiie«, and In no danger of burning Guy Fawkes In effigy, yet ay-opis to the full Um «Mrth(edoa view· of Catesby'· plot, the two prle»ta' implication tn It, Salisbury's freedom of respon¬ sibility for It, as those views are held by the genera! consensus of modem English scholar¬ ship to-day. -*- ROOKS OF THE WEEK. ANOT*L3 ?G THE BATTLEFIELD. A History of the Labor« r't th« Catholic SIMe/hoids in the Lste Civil War By Oe.-rs· Barton, barge Svo. pp. 302 «Th· Catholic Art Publishing C"mr»ny.> LETTFP.lNil FOR DRAFTSMEN. ENQINMSRS AND STI'DENTS. ? Practical Pystem ot Freedom Let¬ tering tor Worklna I'rawing« By Charle» W. Rein¬ hardt. Thirl T*-.ifand of long quart,·, pp. ?. <D. V»n No»·ran! & Coi POP. T Y t" IX YEARS IN THE ARMY. Bt Ll«ut*n»nt- Oanoral John M. Schotlfld. No, xvf, 677. (Th· Century Company.) IMPRESSIONS <>F SOUTH AFRICA By Jame· Bryce. .ro, ir· »?!. 40t». tTh» Canteif Company.> the STonT of marie Antoinette By Ann* i* Bn-keli, Svo. pp. »iv, 314. (Th· Century Com- pany- > JAV\, THE GARDEN OF THE EAST. By Eli»· Ruhan.ali Scllmor·. 12mo, pp. 8W. (Th· Century Ccmpany.) RUT'ATYAT OF I>oc PIFERB. By J«me» Whttoomb Rlley. Illuetrated by C. M. Ralyea. limo, pp. 111. «Ttn Century Oompeag·) BONOS OF LIBERTY. And oth«r Poem·. By Robert L'nJersood Juhnaon. 16mo. j.p. 107. (Th· Century ? cm; luiy.) CUES?. A Manual tor Beginner». By R. F. Fostor. Brentano'· Pocket Library. ISmo. pp. 10*. (Bren- taiiiVs THE H EST'.VARD MOVEMENT. Th· Colale» and the R*put>:tc West ef th« Alleiilianles With Full Carto- Kaplileal T!lj«trnttr>ns from Contenu·.'rary Sources. r Justin Wlnsor. 8t?. pp. vlll, oiVi. (Houghton, Mlfilin A Co.) POOLaTfl INDEX TO PERIODICAL LITERATURE. Third Supplement from January 1. lMi to December 81, 1WW. Hy William I. Fletcher ajid Franklin D, Iv"le With the co-operation of the Amerl'-.in Llbrnry A»>ociatlon. G?. «d7. (Hi'Ughton. Mlfflln ? CO I THE REALM OF THE HAVfnUROS. By Sidney Whit¬ man. ???, pp. 810. (I/ovill. ("X«rj*r!l A Co.) DOK LtlSi· WIFE. A Romance of th· West Indica By IJlltan Hlnmaa Phuey. ltiiiv. pa. S35. (L«m»on, Woirr· a ceo THE HAPPY. 1?11?. Edited by II D. Dowry. With P\x CtcSlng· ly ? Ililtlp Plmiott 12mo, pp. »>1. (John 1 ?ue- THE BARTH BRBATH. And Other Po»m». By A. K. ISmo, : M (.' lin Une 1 THE FA IKY CHAKOBTUNO And Oth»r Poem». Br Dora Sneran iMn. «"lenicit Shorter). Oblong 16m«», . pp. 1«.»' I .li.-, l.i-.r ' A BOOK of OU> ENOUSH I*OVE sonob. With an Inttv «.ti, itloa by Hamilton Wrlç-it Mabla And »n Aocpi ,,r. meat of DeoaraUr« nr»»-in*· by «)«org· Wnartea BdwarSa ifmo. pp. 1S8. (Th· Macmillan Ooaagaey I ETHICAL BYBTOMB, By Wilhelm Wunde Tranalatad by llargani Pley waahhurn. «t?. pp. 106, (Th· Maemlllan ?' «aim;·) CAMPAIGNING WITH GRANT. By General II.«-a-.» G Iter. Svc\ Cl· (Th· Century «Company.) ????? Ry Henry». P1«nl;!«K-«v-a. Translated from th· Pol.ah by J.-r«::il»h Curtln. Svo, pp. Ml. (Little. tarewa .·* Co.) A ?????'??G?? CI^AFS BOOK OF THE STATK OF MK'HICAN. By Charles W. Nichols ?ß?t?? pp. 80S. (C W. Barleen 1 ARGINI' THE WORLO. Geographical Realer Primary R-vli L Pv Stalla W Carroll Edited by Claranc· T. Carroll, luastratod. >T).· Mor*· «Ompany.? "ALI, QUIRT ALONO THE POTOMAC.** Ar.d Oth«r Poem· By Eth-1 Lyi.n Beer», lftroo. rP 8?2. (l*v,rt»r i «' .·.<*., TICTOR1AN I.ITI.RATCHE. Sixty Tear» of Book» »nd ¦ookCBSB I>y Clement K. Shorter. l'Imo, pp 231. CDodJ, Meal Aio.) THE TRAOCD1 OF HAMLET. PRINCK ?G DEN ?a. ? Bv William Rhakt*pear«. With Illu»tr»t:on· by H. C. Christy. Crown 8vo. pp. 254. «.Dool. Mead a oo THE r\FCSITo.v8 ORELK TESTAMENT. Kdlted by W. Rebanaos Nicoli. V«*. ?. G?. 672 (llodj. Mead * Co ? PORTRAITS AND BiLH«'????G? OF MUUCXArfl Translated frrm the Fiwnafe of rHmllle Bellalcu«. By Ellen On-, l'ln.o. pp. 8o2 (Dodd, M»at A Co.) A Gt'U'E To BIBLICAL BTI7DT. By A. S. Peak· With an Intr->!-.ictlon by A. ML Fulrbalm. ldn-.o, pp. M4. tDodd, Mead & Co.) BTE-WAYS. B> Robert S- Hieben». L2mc, pp. f»«i. «I'odd. MsaS A Co.) AMERICAS* BO.'K PRICKS cx'BRENT r.mp'.l»d G?'-t? the Auctioneer·' Catalogue·. By Luther k Living¬ ston. 8v>. pp. G?1 .1 aiM, Mead A Co) THE ANGLK'AN REFORMATION. By William Clark. Creara, Ire, rr· **»' "Tan Epoeba <*r church His¬ tory." (The C&rlstlan Lltatatnr« Company.) LUCILE. By Owen r#.luh \Mth twr.v· fa/almlle· of Water Col rs by Madelin« Lwnalre an«] on« i.u.-.ir·. Uloitratloa» in Black-and-Whit« by C. MrCormi.-k Rogers. g.iar:o, »p. HS2 (Frederick A. stoke» ? ompany.) LITTLE ????8??G?. C>' Ruth Ogden. K.mo. pp. 12~. (Crederteli a st-ke» Cotnpany.j TRCTH ANO G????'.?. By R P. Bromp. 12mo. pp IH. «iJhlcag'j. ill.: Inlernallonal Boot Company., THREAI'ï- OF LIFE. By Clara Bht-rwood BoIllBS. ????"), pp. 3"4. iLamaen, Wolff« S SCIiiNTlFIc ASPECTS OF CHRISTIAN STVTOBNCJS. Bv <; Frederick ft'rlghl I..u»trai«d lumi. pp. e«.¿ (?. ??;:·· *·. ä- co ) PUNCTUATION With Chapter· on Hyp*«*n1x«ilon, «.ap ita:: Spelling. By F. Ilorao· TSaU. Imoo. pp. isa il>. Apptaton a BUDDHISM AND ITS CHRISTÎAH CBITICa, By Dr Paul .··. i-':·' ·· PP. *«'·¦ ITS« <·?*? Co-irt. Pub¬ lishing Company > NIRVANA A STORI or BUDDHIST r^ILCiSOPKT. Bv P. ¡1 '"axua Il'.jstrated tud Pr;rii»4 t»y T. Hasegaws, ???? ·. J»p«.n. iTh« ·?»·? Court l*ut>l'.s.·. i: «; »? I any ) SOCIAL LIFE IN OLD VIRGINIA BEFORE THE WAR Nel« ·? Page vrìtn Ili latratlon« by Ih >.··»» Ca<sata l'imo, pp, ?«·?. (Charle« Soribner*« sor ? LDLLABY-LAND. Hon«« : Childhood. By Bogen« Field. Seid '«M by Kenneth Orábame ar.d I )u»trat»l by Charles R/.tln»/.n. I'.n.o. pp. ¦£><». «Char.«» ?orib ner'a S. ? THE HISTORY ('F FtNDF.NNIS IP.« F-r-unee «nd Mlafortune». HI» F.-'.-r,'·» and HI» Grtateel Bnetni B| w M Thackeray, Illustrated by ·*:.:?«. Bamraoa 1. ·· ? :: ^.(, ??, G»? i'i. 1". Putnam'· ï+.na> SHIRLEY. A Tala By Charletu 3ront« lUoatraStd b> r. H Townsead. Croe Í ; ? r..n. (O, P. Pot nam'3 f TKi; VENETIAN PAINTERS "F THE RENAISSANCB With ..·. 1: '·· ? ··¦ ThelT Wi :k«. By li-fnn-? !'er»r.s r. Third El:-.on With Tv«<::m fi ·?? rbotogravur· 1'. lustra-ions, hvo, ag MB, ··; ? i itnam'l I :·« THE CID ami EADuR. An.1 tbe Waning of the >< » .ont :n ih« »t By H, Butler '*:.-irWe with lustri c. rren Dto-? n^s by ?-·?? Santlaee a?t.* ''· ··.·:. tv ·;· .''.*-- (?. ?. ?????,a,.t?'» Son«; AMBROI8E PARE and HIS TIMES, ISIO -ìr.no. By Stephen I'if' ? ??«·??·^<? Croern 8·· 0, pp .''.·<(«. ,·; I-. ? Iti THE HABITANT, And Oilier Fren'I. '**nr.ad:ar. Poema By William Henry Drummond. With an intrM«.«· tlon by Jy ;', SYochelte, and Illustrati·.«· by I.e. enok B. Oobura ivo, pp. 187. e*,, Putnam'« Bona THE PROTEBTANT FAITH. e»R. SALVATION bv BELIEF By Dw ghi Hinckley Olmstead, lSm·. pi M) '',. P, Putnam ? ! " ) DEFIANT HEARTS. By W, Helmburg Translated by Ann:·· VP. Ayer and H. T. Slate, iBmo, pp. MS, «i«. F fcVrm Ä- Co.) WASHINGTON A Rational Erie iD HI« Cantoa By Ivi«« .:·. ·G??«?? Rank. I2*i.^. pp. \n*. <<> P. Put nan ¦ I .·:.·¦ « ??? STORY «"'F THE PAlJCUNEfi. An Episode in Colonial History By BanffttM ? Coett. «Yown «... pp. uiu. ?; !' Pul asm · I us » ON BLUE WATER. By Edmondo Aiadeie Tran» latent ?- .tn· ·?. ?. Brown Illustrât««! ßtß, pp. ;>>7 «3 ? ? ??? WAT TO THK W <>;>t; l'y swaleea she** 32?p? M ~'¿ " ' ·"'· I áV ''"¦¦*- SHADOW« By M A. D. ?F··» «···· «¦» ?* «' ,ivp»:i:.: .? Dar.) HARVARD. ?»·*'« "',' n"^rau' ,-rl1"· " '«11« " pel·"«! ¦ '"'' iiiLPEOAltPB·« HARVEST. Bl Uur· E Bebard« BUI ;.''-,,.- 1ß? .. aw lÄtes e. Leuriei .yKt'flìir"v.;--:^*VSfi "SCS »· Wajrnm.ll ¦"· mi»hny.i agaMsÏÏLORAKTd LETT»«* TO A FIUEMV IM a??1ß?0^ WIUi IntrodurtloB ani Sote, h. Jam»« Orasi Wi ,i ISm pp. 182. (T. T. Oowell ?- THE POETI.'AL WORK* OF EUZARETH MR*g. BBOWNIKO With ? Périrait. Bro, pp. SOT. fit.e Ma. ::. lian Cbmpaay.) iva KiiPVRK a Matrimonial Problem. By I.. B. wi- · : New Editine Urne, pp ß» rUssgitmn·, THBoUbEN'S HOTJHDg ANI- STAO MCNTin«; BE <Yi(.l.lx-nONS. By (»rd Rlbble-dal« VVIth aaita- Iroduciion on the Hediti y Mastership itv'Bdw* ·· Burro wa with Numen lllu«tratl«i» ·. PP x'.i. 818. (LoBrnaaaa Orten f. Co.1 RÍRD UFE A finid· lo Ih« Study of Our «'.inm-n BU « B| Frank M. rrhapman II u)trat«<3 r»y Ernest getea Thotam n. Sve, n ''···' ''· applet ß AC IXKCOhS LITERARY OLLE« TI'-N For Scho Room and Family Circi' n·.· j. r. M«·· "»**>·. IJrao, pp. G,?ß «Ameritan Boob «'-mitanyi THE STATE RAILROAD COMMISSION. The State Railroad Commission met in th«· com« mlttee-room of th» Chamber ef Commerce yester¬ day morning snd held. « pubi.«· hearing on the ap¬ plication «.f Die Metropolitan Street Railroad Cos»· «¿any for a rhangs of motive power from hors..-, to underground electrlcltjr on a part of Its system. The preaMOBt, Ashley W. Cola, presided. Both tho other Commissioners, Oeorge W. Dunn sad Prank M Haker, were present, The first motion to come before the Commleelon was an application by tho bat« nee« of the Kinetic steam motor for permis¬ sion to ?-«· their motor on the Babylon (Long ]¦: ai<li Railroad De« «Ion wa« reserved No on« atmeared to oppose the application of the Metro¬ politan Btreei Railroad Company, end li la likely thai consent will be given to change the motive power from horse power to underground electricity 'n Thirty-fourth «t., from Second sva to th«· East Hiver snd In M"··"· BlXth-Bt., between First and Becond avee. Th« Commission adjourned to meet In Albany no»' Monday. CLOSE OF THE ENGINEER» CONTENTION. The convention of th» American Society of Me¬ chanical Engineers bsld it» Anal session yesterday One <.f the papers by Oeorge Richmond proved to be ur.uHually Intercalimi to the member·. It w»h "Tberssodynamlcs Wlthoul the Calculua." Other papera read wer· "Electricity In Cotton Milla," by W. i". Smith Wbaley, Columbia, s. C "The Valua¬ tion of Textile Manufacturing Property,'1 by Charles T. Main, Beaton; "A Hiny Boll Threading Devi.·*." by Jam«-r« Mafi.«es. BtwtngOekt, Vt. ; "An A«wurata <"o*tkeei.lng; Byetem." by ?. M Morris.. Cincinnati; "Th« Stevens Valva ';«ar.'· by Andrew Fletcher, liobokm, .<¦ j "A Convenient Form of vyirc-Tektlns Machine," by Arthur L. ??«·«. ??p.,,?- l>d. :.. V ¦·,'. Holler Retting," by <;. W Biseell, Alni«. Iowa; "Auaillarj Engine« ami Transmis¬ sion Tovvrr in Naval VesselB," by Oeorge W. Dickie, Han Francisco, Cal.; ''Machine Moulding without Hiri|,i.ii.? Plates," by ?, ??. Mumford, Rutherford, N. J.. "A r<^w M. foi tha Turret L*thc." by James Harinees, Kprlturneld, Vt., and "Pustless Buildings." by C. J. Wood. Boston. Mas«. The «pring meeting of IROS will be heM at Niagara Palls._ CHAMES VETOED RY THE BISHOP. ST. STEPHEN'S AND THE CHAPEL OF THE ASCENSION MOVED WITHOUT THE NECESSARY CONSENT. "WHI^H IS NOW REFUSED, niehop Potter hs» refused to permit St. Stephen» pnrlsh to occupy the Chapel of the Transfiguration. In West Slxty-nlnth-at.. and the Church of the As¬ cension to move It« West Sido mission work to HorattO-et In each Instance the change·» have been practically accomplished, end or.e who Is well verse.1 In ecclesiastical law said yesterday that there SSSSSS to he nothing for these parlshe» to do but to return to their former abiding place». At the me«iing of the Standing I ommlttee. of the Diocese thl» week the Bishop Informed the Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix. the chairman, and the other mem¬ bers of that body that ho refused the application of St. Stephen's Church, In Forty-slx:h-et., near Klfth-ave., to remove to the building until recently occupied as the (.'hapol of the Transfiguration, In West sixty-nintii-st.. near the Boulevard The Cllepel of the Transfiguration wa» founded by the Ree. Dr. Ûeeirge H. Houghton, over twenty year» ago. au ai uptown mission e.f the church of the »ame name in East Twenty-nlnth-st. It w«.· not especially prosperous, but within the pa»t two years it began to grow In numbers and zeal. However, lust spring the vestry of th·· Church of the Transfiguration «loci,led to dispose of the chapel and put tho proceed» of the »ale into the endow¬ ment fund of the parent church. The congregation of the chapel made an un»uoc«-n»ful effort to pur¬ chase tho prop'Tty and establish an Independent parish, but tho property wa» bought by St. Ste¬ phen'» parish for BRASS, and the congregation of the chapel secured a storeroom In Amstordam-ave., where they have continued their servues, with th» Rev. Uwion Carte« Rich, formerly vicar of the chapel, palesi in charge. St. Stephen'· Church, the Rev. Charle» R. Treat, rector, took poestwstos of the purchased building in October, defending upon »'-curing tho roneent of the Bishop. But there were protests from rome members of the parish, who wished to have their church rebuilt near its former situation. In Korty- B.xth-st.. and from tw> of tho Eplacopal churches, vrhtoh are established near the acquired building. ChrnVI Church. In the Boulevard· nnd Seventy-flrst- st.. and A.I Angel»' Chifreh, la «Vest EnJ-.v. e. u:«d Elahty-flr«t-«t The Bev. Dr. Shlpman. rector of Christ i.'tiuroii, who a member of the Standing Committee, ah<1 the Rev/. Dr. Townsead, rector ol A'.l Angels, N'iti) protected that th>re «raa no room In the netshborhood for atiot-ier Episcopal church which would have serrici «am« typ« as their own. T.-.e fact ti.at th·· member« of Transfiguration Chapel did not unite «rithBt, St.*piien's congregation lens,, though) to ¡ia\e lud .ve «hi with th« Bisnop, ligo vei/x-d by Bit! I'Hrlsh of th" Ascension, l"!fth-a\e. anel 11 e otiier change v«t/-wd ;>y ??*???? Potter in that Tenth-at.. which recently discontinued the Chapel of the Comforter, In Qreenwleh-et., en ? transferred :·« W'e«: SI·.ß mission work to a building which it irehaaed at No M Morati»-«·. The R»v. l»r. B. V. De Costs, rector of tn« Church >f Bt .lohn th« K\aii- ¦jellst, put in a vigorous protest, de· taring that i>> engaging In work In th» Horatio«! building the Char·«! of the Comforter *»¦ Meroachtng on bla narleh w.irk. Dr. Do ? "osta» objection «ras forti« Pel hv pr ite«·« from 'he Bev. Philip ?. ?. Prow a, vi ar of fit LnkS'S Chapel, of Trinity Church, In Hudson··!., ani from the Be,-. O S. Ito·-ho. rector Of St roter'.« Church. ?? V.'est Twentieth··.. The Bishop decided aralnst the parish of the Ascension, wMch I«, t.iorefore, left vrl'h a mission hoiue on Ita íiand» wbl ;h It ha» »»? forbidden by the Bishop to use. ni. II Will ?.??? tn rem ve Uh West Bid« wjrk to *lie ,,M rjreenvrlch-et. »He or to some prop¬ erty near by. METROPOLITAN TE11PLF ANNIVERSARY. THE -90KWAXD MOVEMENT" riVK ????? AC»4>- PROORBBB Of ???G WOBK. The Metropolitan Tempi« Beventi -ave nnd Four- te«ntli-et.. yesterday celebrated t.'.o fifth anni. <r- »ary of "Forward Movement,*' or the throwing open of It» door» Cor nightly servie·« and mission work. Tnere wa» a religious service at 4 O'clo k. ai whl-h the Rev, I >r. F M. North ani Ut« Re», Dr John Hall assisted the P.ev. s l'ajke« Cadmaa, pastor of tn» Metropolitan Ten] >. The anniversary meottna l< * ataos at ? e/clock In the sventi ?. sad In Itided addre»»e» by J'..»:. y Edvard ''. ?? Iresr«, th« Rev Di Jame« M. Bu h- ley, th« R«v l»r i*. I. Oebon, the itev. Dr V M North and J. M Cornell, i-ad»r of the Temple confer· · Th« ?« ? s Parke« Cadman t+?? th« «?· ual r«»- port, »hewing that during ih« y»«»r over 2 ·'<·> i"r· vices w»-re i. with a total attendane« of tn·»· hundred ami fifty thouaai er« « G?« renvoi« ?...·· :. iw a membership of l.Qul In mparU t. with. *.: two and s half ira «so Th· vesti h r connected «rltS rh« Temple, whl h e naia >d of .Ixty-two ii>: ·.« .. r«ai «u. >. novi hu .->' :.o:nt««r». ROCKEFELLERS WAST FAIR VALUATION'S). TfOBT ASK BCHOOBj TRUBTEflEg TO ABCgflsTAlM ?? ? V/.I.PF. eiF THBTB ggTATsM IM TUE MAN SKR PROVIDED BT LAW. joli l> »r.d Wintern Rochefetler, through fhe«r oosnssot, Howard H Mor»·, of North Tarrytown, hive tnk»n additional action tow ird Obtaining a fair valuation of their »stn-e» In the township of M< ml Pleasant, In Weetcheeter County. They h»v» a'..-«sa.ly «nke-n i»gal measurea to aseen ii¡. the true ? of their property In the town, and now Mr Me>r«e hi» served notice on the s. ? .,; u tees of th», varie·«)» districts of the township In which th» kefellar property is situated thai they claim a luetlon In the valuation of their real property í r ??«· reason 'hat the valuation of ich pro¡,- arty eannoi he »- ertalned 'rom the inm .1 n.· iit ., -if the t -.. .·· .1 .-¦· '. an erri r 01 p il -. tf.k» or the perl of t,·;.· tow.·, us.- «»or« In th« »crlption ¡.1 .1 valuation of «aid property." '¡:.·> ,. · 11,.· trustees sscartali ine ti ¦¦ valu· of roper t y ¦»¦· provided by tew at.d hav· it ae- ·, .1 u ordlngly. H ;..,s been ihe .i-oini custom of the school tru«- tee« to base their ass« «smonta on ih» town assess ment» In this «ano. the Rockefellers da lare the) axe entirely too high end Ul equal. ? AH EXCHANGE'S BIGBT To I.XIST. AMsTfTEB is a Kt-'IT BT TUB «¡e«·. RNMENT UMDER ??« ???-???ß? LAW. Omaha. Nob., Dec. ?. On behalf of tie· members of tho South «'mahn. Llv« st«N-k Eschai :!·' St· ton.»·>.. bn.\e» pied an Mwwar in the United States «'ourt to the sull "t th« Oovernmenl >f lbs United States ir which tti·· Oovernment »e»k* t.. dissolve tii» Uve Stot-k Exchange under tho Anti- Trust law- of the L'nlted States Th«· casa con· Bidered of the utmost importan. throughout th·« country, as it involves the. validity of every live stork eT-e-hange« and a. greet variety of business establishments nil over the United state« The answer *»U out thnt it I* the customary practice ..r all cities and commercial i>ointn to form axchanges or HoartiH of Trail·«, to facilitate th» making of Mich places a tra.il« centre·. Hin h ex- changea are formed by dealers In stocks, bonds, grain, cotton and other agricultura] producía Uve .;to(-kt>, «'?p, minerals and In limosi »very trade In comroodltlea Th«· anawar allégea that such ai-so- r-intlons do not engage In boa,1 . s. lui simply «.re- Bcrlbe rules and provide facllltlei for the traaaac- tlon of business, ami carh membai1 Is left free to compete arltb th». other members for the fair ami juHt conduct of ble business. Referring te th« Union Bloch Yards Company and the Omaha Stork V'arila, the nnewer denle« that it 1.« a publie market, but ullages Usai it a )>riv»t«· concern; that Ihn rattlo Bhlpped In are ¡.-¦..? In pens owned by th« company ami remain there umil sold, and Ihe commission merchant telling ??.« k hsJ no further control ?.?«·? tii>· dispo¬ sition ot the si... k. The answer denle· thai the «lock yard« afford the only available place in the territory for the sals of stoch, and ai.»«!- that the greater portion ar» «old by negotiation· conducted away from the ..aril'« ami the Exchange, it ¡4 also denied thai the buslneaa <·G commission mor- inti in commerce partakes of an hiterateta nat¬ ili··, within the constitutional meaning. A denial also mad« thai parsons not member« who «hip :ii 1; to Bouth Otnsba aio compelled t.. r»>,ì?|? 1,, oihtT markets, hut li alleged that thej aro offeri'ti every facility f.ir making sales. Th·· iMend- um« de·:.)- unlawful combination. Th«« Exchange «vrw its light to maintain or¬ ganization, ami that it Is not compelled to deal with luiy member win. has been expelled for m Is- conduct or who le threatening to destroy the Ex- '.-iiikc from personal motives. Th answer con- ¦ hui»« wim the statement that. Instead of hinder¬ ing <>r retarding the owners of iiv«· Block in th«. Bale of their Htot k. th«· purpose of th«· (exchange le tu faollltate <-u<-h salo and to pron.ot·· an«) Increase the VOlUtn· Of hiisln··»» ilone at the Btoeh y ?? ??. " [NDICTBD IJ1CDKR A bTATE TRUST I*A\V. Chicago, Dec. 3-True Mill have b«»ti voted under Un; Illinois Antl Trust tew by the Oraad Jury airaiiiMt free prosalnaeit ß;·>?.· repair mAin.factur¬ er». The eosaptelat »'ar. made by Allan C. Bellech, a hardware sserohant, and follows a civil suit for IM.OUQ damages, |a which Mi. Bellech charged the ihr manufacturare with having conspired m ruin hi* business by formine s combination lo fores im the Mice .! stove repairs. The case i< laid lo be the Orsi of it* kind steca the Antl-Trusi In« went Into effect Bellech In his complaint alleges that when the e-ombnatiori was formed he u .·, invited t«· join but refused, ami im« been oomoeUlad to pay retail prices ? result, with a conseuue.nl lose of a large part of hi« business. BLANTHER'S CONFESSION FALBE* BE WAS IN ATUANTA WHB.N THE MURDER OF WHICH rjCBRAcTT STANDS 0)?*??«?G??) WAS G?????G.?. Atlanta. Oa., Dee. 3..Joseph E Blanther. better known a.« Arthur D. Forbes, who was manager and proprietor of the Southern Purchasing Agency in Atlanta and who recently committed »ulclde In a .iunty Jail In Texa», was In Atlanta on the day when the murder of Blanche Lamont and Minnie William» occurred in San Francisco. Thia state¬ ment Is made by perrons in Atlanta who knew Forbe» well and had business dealings with him. To support their atstements the books and records which were In Fe>rbe»'» office hero havo tieen con- »ulted. and it Is ehown that between April 1 and April 14. 1S°S. the time of the two murdor» in San Francisco, Forbe» was here and doing business with Kelly Brothers ft Co. end other firms If these statements are true, and there appears no reason to doubt the proofs submitted. Forbes, aliad Blanther. could not have possibly b*»«n the murderer, and the declaration made In a written eonfes«lon admitting that kill, d the young women Is faine Mrs. Blanther, tlio widow ef the suicide, has been making «very effort to show that her husband was the real murderer, and tiiat Theodore Durrant. now under «entenoa of death for the crime. Is an Inno¬ cent man. Mr«. Planther, who wa.« r'eceived by her husband, is doubtless sincere In what she says, but her whole course of action Is based on the alleged «rrftten confession, which, it Is said, was found on the person of Mianther when ho committed suicide In the Texas Jail. XrtD Publications. J 0XGMAN.3, GREEN & CO.'S NEW BOOKSi RAMPOLLI: Growths from a Lonfr-Flanted Root, being Translations, New and old. chiefly from the German: along with A Year*· Diary of .n Old Soul. By GEORGE MACDONALD, LL.D. Crown firo. .51.7."». WMLLIsfOTOWi HIS COMRADES AND CONTEMPORARIES. By MAJOR ARTHUR GRIFFITHS, Author of "The British Army." "The Queen'a Shil¬ ling." etc., eto With 23 Portraits, 13 being Jn Photogravure, besides numerous Line Drawing« and Map« of Spain and Belgium. I.iirgi« Imperial lOmo, cloth, extra, gilt top. Roo. FALKLANDS. By the Author of "The Life of Fir Kenelm Differ" "The Life of a Prig»" etc 8vo., $880 ,·.?? Ma "IJf· of Sir Kenelm Gt?^?,·· reçttntly p'ib- lUhed ti e A'ithiir j,re»«nt*d a ? rtra'.t of a sev«nt«enth- century "amateur.' Dealing wit), much tli« salue ;¦'.·'¦ 1 Las et. leu\ red In "Falkland·" t.. Uscrl·»» two Vts- cuni» at,.! ?«·· Vt·*-juntea·»» bmrlnj that title, woo se*c- »rajly dovtossd «¦ in· ot th ·· e BSIeUnS "views" which have b*. n, e s lieh · prominent f«a!ure e,f Eng'.l»h fan-lly life In liter fine·. THE DIARY OF MASTER WILLIAM SILENCE. ? ????G·? OF SHAKESPEARE AND OF ELIZ¬ ABETHAN SPORT. By the Right Hon. D. II. MADDEN, Vlce-Chaxi- eellor of the University of Dublin. With illustrations. Mvo. gilt top, $4.00. "Btndent« f H-.«.i.»«re«.re win turn to th!« bo-k with »h« keeneat plaaaura, »Ml« no les« ic-en W||| he> the Hp·· pre<-latlen of it,· »»nulli· lover of all b. ^«. aa thumb! th!· beautiful «je· in.er, ef ta« bookmaker'« ar». "To the itud*nl ·>? ehake«r.«are th.« boofe mus; be a prli· tn In« 'n'.iff'ie·,· ?,'-ier !rt Oie pnet'l rk It ¦h --'.l prr/v« ar. li. er,':\«. :¦¦ ; er insight ani stnly Into ht« Im;:, irta] linea" · *ti!<-njro Ke.vrd DREAMS ASD ghosts. Hy ANDREW LANG, frown ß??, cloth, orna¬ mental. $'2 00. "A --'le·.>n 'f farr.ou» «..rie». !n Whtrh ?··μ??· vta- |0M, hai'urinati »ral·.·.·, »h····». «· I haunted j«·· plat « leadlos part, Many of the «t ·?·.·» ar. t <%¦ rtcal ·.·.! «:: are infarvetin« tenermi r»n··-« ¦·"; i-.t thl« b»«k ver«· e-'ertaln'.n« »til th · :.u «r» it ai: Intel .»...1 m - ill «uMeeta » .1 :.: I in it mu ¡i üiat all'. .··! Lhe-n ·' V ? ·. THF ?I SO S STORY ROO s;. Ldlteet with an Introduction t.y GEORGE LAU« REME COMME. With photo gravure frontispiece, and '«¡1 full-pago Illustrations. f'rnwn Rvo. cloth, extra, gilt top, $2.00. TM« a Cbrlaun·· b » ¦' a novel 'hararter. and "w- »·«·« -f »«?·.··· ? it -.r:«· rraea ?··« H - ' ¦¦¦¦ »s, .«¦h gn ··.» lueei «t lliam w t^ ta reare s»".te<J Beoti Tla.-i.er,). DteMCM, l^ljrh Hunt, Char· ··· aYont«, Sir« Hh»,l«T nal; Charte· King·!·?, r"tir.»er Lytten. ar.l Iher » rt»»r» a-· !al«l ondar atril ,·' ¦-. ·> ·¦·; ·)« ? u..* pre»»nt» ·?··"1??·?· uf ···· heel »?:'·:? ???? ??·«t··??G·. tbatefaro, from a dont.!» «tandsetat WEEPING FERRY. By MAHOAHET l>. WOODS, Author of "A Vil¬ lage Tragedy."* «"rown Nvo, $1 .10. KsTW BOOKS FOR OHtXDRBN. MIL lasers, NTiW «'JU'1'TMAS BOOM, THE PINK FAIRY BOOK. Kdlte«! by ANDREW I.AN'C. With numerous 11- lustrations by H J. FORD. Crown freo, ornamental cover, gilt edg»H, ·5'-',·? "??!» «JBW ?0·| SS good aa any thai Lave «..ne fr-r«. Mr I-»:.* la wi»» ?a SI« »»leMl «m. tacttaj II arr»ng»m»n·». aM pleasant In SU) i.re:».«. Iti· Uyjk la i»llghtf.r.l>· e. ti pei it-nat'l'. *- ?. V. TlISUII«. ADYMNTUBBS OF TBBEE BOLD BABES: Hector. Ilonorta and Allsander. A Story In Pictures. By F ROSAMOND PRASOER With ?? Colored Platea and 24 Outline· Pictures. Oblong 4tO, $1 G??. "Anythinj more ra¡ilyattn*¡v ridiculous can hardiv ¡.naglnrd. lier elra»ing« ate full if UM rittst dell i.iimw ami »tt n »ell jreat nr-rlienlfal »Kill."- 1 «Hi!-.:·.·). N. V. 77//' 17.',G Ml VX REVENGE. nioatrated in Color l'.y p.'?;?:???·: ? UP¬ TON Words by Berth· Upton. «'Moni? 4to, boards, $2.00 fnif..rm win; "The Adventure« .f Tiro I> p.II·" «?? "T'.ie renniwogg Blcj la Club." "II i1»-itrl(tes the stiver,'or.·« Of a llttl« «tit, SThO fell asie«i> in li « grtr.l··!! ani li. lined that id» ir«g»table« ».:<· avenging up« m her their suffering« -«t the hand« ¦'. ¿:-·'.? ·? .,.·.'..:. ! 1 >I« colored ·..-..· hav« ? f?ß?·»« Ilka la.-se (,r the Oolllwees* buoku oddl) »ttractlv« end titlr. It is a hook lhat a Child «111 «r»ar|>- enjoy." Buffalo Bsnress. Fe.r a*'.· t¦·. \f ksell-r». Rent, postpaid, ?. receipt "f priée, i>v LONOMAN8, QBEEN »v CO., Publishers, B1-Q3 FIFTH AVE., S. Y. I] AN G? riiK M/.v hook, Tin·; althob op "QITO VAOI.S" IS Now BEADY*. ll????. Translated from the Potlah of Henryk BtenMewlca hy Jaremtah Curttn. «With pur- trait of tito author und his daughter. Crown Bvo, Cloth, 12.00. Uniform with the author's other works. About one· third of the Volume's BBO pasea ?* occupied i>> the title· story "Hnnta." In ad.liti·.t. It influd»· Ih·, »«ilhor's BUSSI story, "«'n lit» Bright Hh··!-»." ? mma/i.-e e>f Mante l'irlo, a phll" «nphlOBl rfigloiis «t.ttT ·' IBS ·t??.·??\?..:?. «fltUled "?,,? is Kt.ii'.w Him," »iii'ii »nKge«t^.| to sienalosrici the Mm "f »rlttng "<,'"o Vadls"; a hk.-t. ?·, entitled 'Tar tur Captivity' th» g'-rtu of "With ?'.· and Sword" and the ether valaasee el the «real truogy; "Be Thou BeSaseS." ft Irgeiut Sf Krlehn»; tiunitirwii r..'velette. entitled "Th«t Third W.trnan." «te. LIT 08 follow him Translated from the· polish of Henryk Blenkle-î .ríes by Jeremiah Curtln. Iflmo, cloth, si".* with photogravure frontispiece by Bdrnund 11. Oair.lt, G?) cents, OVER lSO.Omi COPlgSJ OP "QIO VAD1S" Authnrtaetl linahrlited TraosiaUin p? «JEREMIAH CURTTN BAVB AXePJsADT BBBM gOLO. LITTLE, BBOWM i CO., Pubusb^erm, gM WASUINGTON gTatfSCT. BOBTtMt, D. Nero flttblicatione. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S NEW ROOKS. MEMORY AND ITS CULTIVATION. By F. W. EDRIDGE-GREEN. at. D., F. R. C ß., author of "Colour-BUndnees and Colour- Perception." etc. Volume 78. International Scientific Series. 12mo Cloth, $1.50. Memory Is the most Important function of th« brain, without it life «roeld a blank. Our knowledg· all baaed on memory. Every thought, every action, our verf Conception of per«onal Identity, baaed on memory. Without memory, all experience would be u.«el»»; reason¬ ing would be baaed on Insufficient data, end would be. therefore. faJlaeteua. in this volaos· the author demon¬ strate« that memory Is a definite faculty, and h·· It· seat In the basal ganglia of th« brain, aepaeate from but associated with all th» other faciline« of tn· brain. PUNCTUATION. With Chapters on Hyphenlzatlon. Capitalisation. Spelling1, etc. Ry F. HORACE TEALL, author of "English Compound Words and Phrases," etc. lrtmo. Cloth. $1.00. In thl· book the number of rule· haa been reduced to th« fewest poastbl·, In order to m«»t and cover «11 real principles. Subject« .th«r than punctuation are treated eeparately. thus avoidin« a common confusion. A real system of divisi >n Into «yllable« li clearly art Sortis, and capitalliatlon and .fimroundlnr ef wor«l« are carefully treated, according tn th« author's atudy of the best usage ·· far as thai can he determined, vv'th some opinions In fnvnr of application of principles even «"-her· no po»l- Uvely beat actual usage can (.roved. SWEETHEARTS AND FRIENDS. ? Novel. Py MAXWELL GRAY, author of "The Silence of Dean Maltland," "In the Heart of the Storm," etc. No. 231, Town and Country Library. 12mo. Cloth, $1.00; paper, 50 centa Thl· oh arm ina* «tory »how· th· practiced hand of the »uc<e«»fu! novelist. ? rrejenta som« delightful picture.« of ¡English Uf·, and It tnaku · constant demand upo« th· r·.. ,'ur's Intcreat and »ynipathle». "So well known and highly esteemed the name of Maxwell flray among lover» of go>d fl.-tlon. that a new book bearing that name on It· title page need· no herald¬ ing, as th« author (peaks for It· excellence." rpilE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, ADMITTEDLY TIIK LEADING AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL OF THE WORLD, Everr dei«ij-'ment written by ».peclat'jta, the hlgîie«»; au¬ thor! «a In ty-eir r»«n e.-tlve lir-a ·??ßt puer ««retends to competo with It In quallnoa- t'ire .f fi'.:- ..il «tsfl «i'v· tn· aarlru niral ns».s with a degTco of fuÍ'.r.ee» and mnpjeten··· t. · even attempt«·] by ot.'.ers. uiù-ìt urviErva or the cito>r%. BEttT MARKET i: rcrr »rts. BEST MEi HANI'"AL EXECUTION. bxst evbhtthino. for aal· by all bookaellers; or win be sent by matt on receipt of price by th· publisher* ' D. APPLETON AND COMPANY» ? FIFTH AVENUE. NEW-YORK. CHARLES SCRTRNER'S SONS PUBLISH TO-DATt THE DECORATION OF HOUSES. By EDITH WHARTON and OODEN CODMAN, JR. With 56 full-pas;« Illustrations. Large 8vo, $4.00. Thl· Important rotosa« will be found most helpful to all the thousand· of penpl« who ere striving to make the best" of their eurpoundln«;«, eathKlcally «peaking. Th» problema continually enewjntered In the eff>rt to get the boat «ffeota arcb'.tei-tural well to decorative, ar« h«r* m«t by auggea'.lv« ,1p»i-r1ptlona and a series of flftv-sl* phjtograt tiio Illustrati···· whloh »now what th· aitlstlo taat« of different perloda baa already d«rvl»e«l· Jt'trr PUBLISHED, HIIW VOLUMES IN NOTABLE ??G???ß. CHARLES DICKENS'» WORKS, GAPSHILL EDITION. Edited by ANDREW LANG. 32 volumes, «auare crown Hvo, $1.50 each. «JTtRJBTMAS ROOKS «la one volume). With 8 llluetra- tlona by John batata. TUE CENTENARY EDITION, THOMAS CARLYLE'S WORKS. Edited and with Introductions by H. D. TRAILI* D. C. L. With portraits, maps and plans, ft» volumes, square crown 8vo, $1.20 saeta vol um«?. ftXaWSOEVX TllE ORKAT. Volume IH. e**8old by all booltaeUere. or »»rir. post -paid, by CHARLES SCRIRNER'S SONS, IH ibi ???? AVEN'"E, «TCW Turk. ???-? REDUCED for IS»*. OXB gCBgmiPTln.N . »2.00 rot'R SI BSXTUPTI »rg. Tuo FIX SUBBC^tlPTIONS. -.MS t^y gmd f «r Bpeolel Inlucernen·» to Agenta Bpeeimeni Copies Pesa Aidreee I.I THEB TUCKEB Ä SON, ALBANY. ? T. ASE roar bookseller for INFLUENCE of ZODIAC CPON Ht VAN LIFtC. see what the «tar» hold fur you Prit·. 11.00 ????G???'? selling ta» ? »ani» als. KI,FiAN· «Il KIRK, Au'tior. Pub.:*h«r. i*«rt «)r««-i» »¦¦ » Bn '.·¦ n N' Y ¡{7th BdHlon. pc»i paid for 2\c- or «t«,nips HE HUMAN HAIR: Why It Fulls Off: rjrey, and Ih« Reeaedy By Prof HARLET PARKER, a. M. LnNO t G? ? «?.1 Areh-et.. Phi:« Pa. |··t? ..-.e sh Utd r«·».! tl.ls little t«_- k Athenaeum. ? Jnetrnction. ? For Young Ladles.City. FTKEj.rY otm> \-??μ, POR RUMEN ???? CHILDSKN arnesi« Hall. West (Tth Bt Special Bors* Has». f, Pei u.» ? ¡«? .1.1.-11 AM» GERMAN SCHOOL· 81« West sdtri-et.. ? ?a «1 t.) I.itV C ALLEN. Reopen» !-«??. 27th. .hapemnag« f>r »pv.ial pupll». MISS WATSON «nd Mies PORBEl iP«v Meet). Mi"« Jli.lA A. Wli.T.FY iH"m« School, Primary. Praparatwr, PenägUta «?.·«»* for little i>e>y» IM ¦V.TOth-et ri-ilK VEL.TIN SCHOOL MIR tSIRLS. G???G?'???' flr-HOOI. rtl'ILOINO. 180 AND 182 WEST 7??? ST. Renpen· Oct. 61h. COLLEGE PREPARATION. For Tloy* nM Young; Men.City. BBRKELeti SCHOOL, 1* ?* We.-t ««th «t. ll»»«l Mas¬ ter» omo« .¦¦¦ur», to IX Af.enn.tn la ralltd lo th« ?«« 1? epa rat iv Claa». limited to 18, for boy« ï\% to SV« year» old. For Roth flexes.City. rtr-RUTZ Madleoa la (»th St. * B'wey). ?. ? ; Kt-iirint nr 'ft Court St., H'klyn; bran tie» tn other ? ft ·>7é.Ámm c,"'í- sMel tea her». be.t meth.id. mod- LAJIQi AUt.3 ernt« '-nn«. Cla*· or privat« le·« io«. For Poys anil Yotinfr Men.Country. 1¡«AIR*TELD ACADEMT A Rome School for Bor·. At- ' tractive, healthful and thoruugh; Individual attention, PRANCIS II BKEWEK, A. M. Prlri K.ilrftVM. ('..nti MAPLEWOQP INs r Cea ordvllle, i*a .83OT Bucce»· ful «cil ">l. on« of the Le»· t.. infine with energy, te «rak« up hoya t.. lutte« ·' life Under IS > » sii ?··?*«·« ? prohibited. Ren gymnasium. Location beautiful. elevated, healthy .1 BHORTHUOB fTele). a μ Pria. ROCKI.ANP INSTITI'TB. RySefc-O« the -Hudson. . Superb, high ktaattlon; bey*· horn« Ufe pn-paratory Beassi: coli'g« cornili, e, Irti. English: s'ngl« rmim«. C'AIT J. WILSON. ?. M.. 1 Pria. For TOBRf Lrnllfs.Country. rpilK CAMBRIDGE BCHOOf*. i A «siecl «chool fur flrls. Comfort« of liomív, Mr ARTHUR OILMAN Is the Dlivcior. . ???'.?:??·;?·;. MA8fl The ?ßß???a school ?«>? tun,;.·. Bins Hi«·.« on the Hudson Mtas C C. 1-TT.LKR. Prin¬ cipal. Mth >¦· ar beglai septevsher 3-?. For Roth Sexes.Country. ??????????'? <V J.) SEMINARY. 'ciiv-enlent ti ¡tee ton,, PI ila. Bait, and Wash'p M.-th »*?·». f.Mh >«-ar. Healthful. Beautiful. 18 teacher«. IL* .¦:-<» is««) « rear Po» beautifully llluatratad catalogue, ad- ,v·-» THOMAS HAlfLON, ? r». President. öchool ^gciuice. ,Mj POBEION TEACH uppli^.s profeaeors. Tea· her« Tutor». Ctoveesasssa· A MEIUÇAM ANO POBCION TEACH ERST fcÇJBN ? ..?-.·.· ei ?? ols and Khi· II«·. Apply to »lr». II J. ??G??-PULTON. 23 IV.I m Square. Diluting ôcl)oole. VUBXANPKR ??'????'???, las We«: d.??? «t -I'n- v·.,·.. μ p ind rletr-l .iallv. «vaiti tliorougtily and seti .illv laughl t^n.! fur circular._ ?», OE'iRiiK iifinwniiTH, ? || .·. ? i:ast «STH sr l'Ines»· »ml priv.it« temóme. Men'· SlSSS SOSSaSHMe« lier, nth DodWOVth'S new Minuet. rseelved at i*ieir Usassrs OSaee, Me. 1.341 Broadway, M r ? rtn .if illri ».. mull II n'CIOch p. m ailvertl^e- menia received «t ti:«· foUowing branch dBcs· at lek'ii.ir cifflre ratea unni 8 o'clock p. ni. »?«: -"?4 BUi-sve., ¦ e. im. ssd a 133 Bth-av·.. .m ¡util st.. Uacy'·, n·,, .... and l-iih-«l Ill .Columbus-»»« n«ai We«l sstl .1 1 in Wfot 4Ï.1 st. tirar t'ith ave; H2 Kast 14th -t.; '?%' West «3d «I between Tth and t«th ave».. ISO Kns« e V t. et.; 1,838 ·? ave., between 7Hth »nd 77th ft« 1,031 Sd- SVSn nr*r «il»'-'t.; 1.708 lat-sve.. near .«:1th »t. Q»mnßcmcnt3. ACADEMY OF MUSIC. THE WHITE HEATHER. WHITH HEATHER. MATINEE PRICE» Ut h St. ? Irving PL A ORKAT BUCHES« .?. Y. HERALD. M«tte««« To-dav A U -d. L Ev·. 8:18. BEST SEATS 1.00. nuoi. MAY IHWIX. ¦rira» & 311th st. I Mat. ? ves., S :1B. To-.lar. SDEUOhl ?- il.I.y BOISTEROUS .? ti;« SWELL f MI.SS KIT/WELL. iADWAY TIIEVPRE. Brea, I IS Mat ?- day. ?. rit.Wli 11 VMII.s.Till! IDOL'S ????. FHAXK DtMEI.«i.THE IDOL'S F.YE. Prie·« SUM). SI CARVEOIE HALL Popular runeert. SIXDAY Ev«., D··.·. »th. at '-.15. Sembrich DAVID BISPH .M Baril ·· Vv*M. LA VIN. Ten r; JESSIE SHAY. Planl»t, in·.I PI I.I. ORCHESTR \. Big BEVIOMANl.«-.inductor. Popnlnr Pi I. ¦, Beate, fio- t * 1.50. Now '? rale a: bos offlo« and Bchuberta'a fii-iiTiil Adnilaalnn. ti» et«. CARXEGIE HALL. Oratorio Society, Walter TJ«mro«ch, Conductor. TO-XIGHT AT H. Reserved seats. 75 Sir,, at bos oBkee. 2l(th Kenson, tsilT-'OS. Gounod's Redemption, BOLMVtSl Soprano. Jolinnti.i «.nriakt. Contralto. Marajacrtte Hall. Tenor. Win. H. Itl.-erer. l'-r.· :·.'¦ David Il I »n h a m. i lai - ? irire.«·«!«« ?'. DiiahnelL F'iil Chonta f Oratori« tíoriet». centa to SX ?: ?·?. Sii aas GRANI) ORCHESTRAL CONCERTS. Thicker! r.«; Hall. AUTOR S EI DL. (*,??·«? lieti,G. CHICKERIXO A «OXS· BBOORD <OXCERT, Tueail.> Eve., Dec. 7, at Htlfa, XAVER SCHARWENKA Will play the Chickerin? Piano. Rei. «eats, $1 .«··. 1 SI.no, »dml·- ¦icn no eta., n.w oa «al· at L,a otri?«, «"filck.;rinii Hall. OAJINOJ .'ID WEEK! ? Revised Edition! New son«·»' \-w ComicOpers! "UHrn*· ? \T. ??-?1??? "HSMr· DALY'S Every evening. 8:15. Ltet Matin···· T..lav. at 2. TAMING THE SHREW. MISS ADA REHAN as Katherine. Tuesday next: The r. w corneali. "NUMBER NINE." DORIS' WIXTER CIRCUS »2D ST., DOHIS' WIM Ell CIRCI!* near Bn alway. 2 ani 9:15 P. M. EVKItVUODT ENTHl*SIASTICtt 2?. V). Jfc, fi. PR* PS UNANIMOUS BUCCESÌII -..,, » THE WORLD IN WAX E DE* ORANO CONCERTS. MISEE. I CIXEMATOGHAPIt - à) Every b)ur from 1 to Ó, 8 to 10. EMPIRE THEATRE. B'way «ad 40th ¦«. JOH>j Matinee* Tn «lay and Wedneeday. JOIIX" A MARRIAGE OK CO**» KXIEXCB. DREW. A MAH HUGE OF G??VEXIEXClfl. DHEW. I I*ven:n<s. 8:3u. Matine··. 2:10. GARHICK THEATRE. «I -·" «·" ? was» MAI DE Mhta. To-lay and Wednesday. MAl'DR THE LITTLE MIXISTER. .»I»\MS THE LITTLE MIXISTER. ADAMS Evening». S 20. Mats.. 2:13. GRAXD I 2:r. «t. and BUt-eve. Mat ne« To-daj·. OPERA j THE SILVER KIXÍ·. HOI SE. t ??.?? WEEE."FTsncIa Wltoo« Opera Oo." LOTTIE COLLIXS. THEATRE. ÏTH BL · M Prohman -? rnvid !a.sco I" PIRST i!o:t\. Bga I '.· M«: «lay, 'IXHIAN SIMMER. HOYT·« ???????, 24TH ST, SEAR BW AT. Cm., S:SO \u-s Wed. and Te-da» 8:1S ????? A «.TKAXI'ER IX SEW YORK. HOY I'S A 9TRAXGER IX XEW YORK. 1«H>TH PERFORMA Vf·" DEC. 15 iSOUvENIRS». Herall Bor ??«*. RKT.'-J RICE'S t·. e > "??! ? "Tin: 5 M ¦- w. FRF.XCH F'RKXt'H 1 S T> tiy. 2 16, M HO." M HD." HARLEM , Bv·. t ".·-· Mal ¡a» 2. (taorss HAItl.KM Edward«·' I- t 1 ;¦!-··. ????ß? OPERA nui su. ira Co.. "ix TOWS. Next Ween 'TUMBERLAND ·ß1" Origin«! PTodeetJe·. »y A IKVINi.» PLACE THEATRE. F.\ea o:U. Mi; BTRACSS' beautiful ·¦*-«··· WALDMEISTER, JULIE KOPACST «nd Star i"i«t. KNICKERBOCKER. BROADWAY POR. 88TR SfL EVENrXOP, S3« ??????? TO-DAY, 2:1a. SEI ·??· CROWDED M< NTH. MR. *. G. riOODXVIX.?? ??»*???G»? CITIFEN. MR. ?. G. GOODWIN.AS AMERICAN CITIZEN. 4-? AXXA ? ELD'S S veltr. 0 «at hit. KOBTKR AXXA HELIPS 1I-0S rtlg'.itty. ? ????- ..7.1 Ott»·! Porelgn BU« ? «V [ Next Sunday. Dee Stl 2G? r'*>l"*I.AR ADM.. BOc OONrERT OA1 KIEL'S" Itl-tiTRA, Vat t>-1av. I ANNA HELO »nj «::h«-r f » -.im S'.ira. LYCEI M THEATRE. * a SSd-st. Begins Siel, liVIHI M THEATRE. Daniel ? -inn Msil«|«S LYCEI M THEATRE. e'atlnee« Sat. ???? l'RINCESS IMI TUR IltTTI ???,?. THE PR ? BJC ESS AMI Till". Ill I 'TE H ELY. By th» »«uh r ' "The Amai ...-.' Sweet Lavend r," etc ?',?'?? TUESDAY »? 3 ¦.-' -It-. I.5.ITI HF. oh Tin: oimtiestka AMi ITS INSTRUMENTS ? WM. J. HEM)ERsO>, ESQ. ILL! «TH *.TK.n JIY ? ? ? % M ERIC ?? SYMPHONY olilHIiMIU. Given under th« tuapl «> f the Iait.·»- CetlegS <t Mc- ··. s»jts nay be seemed at bos eSfea METROPOLIT V\ OPERA Hot SB. RECORD I.IHVI) UONCERT. :-' . HE SERIES. SIXDAY. DEC. V BilB P. tL Soldi, GaVBlSUkXÌ. r>Y, PUONO-15LAUVELT JACOBT· .DEMPSBY, MANA'S!-'Mr NT K. E. JOHN8TON &. CO. BTEINWAT PIANOS USED. METROPOLITA*! OPERA HOI SE. The Suli»crl|itlon sul«·· fur th.· Sen»ou o| GRAND OPERA In French, (irrmnn. una Hallan. WALTER DAMROaCU mi il' « . A. El.LIS, MOW open «?? th» Metroi U»n Oper» II is«, a redue- t' n : Bft«eej r«T «sat vv... «ases te «ubscrthan for ti.«· ?-· aa .n. Il IMI \TI V\ B> ¿s « M IMI ???* M A MI ITTAR wa> ?: ilô!. Mat. ? lap, Ml His ?.? ? iii; i'.i.H.i:. His LITTLE Dull«.?. his in p.e mux.e. lieo. eth. RtCSerda a;.: ... ... .:. M\ BOYS." NATIO\\L ISTH AUTUMN EXHIBITION. ACADEM1 Mow Open iy sad !-:v.:..-ig. tu DESIGN. ? W ili Av«. Ft»· Exhibition «if I'tun* of Ne« Acsdem) Hulldlsg. PUCASL'RE PALACE. 881 IJ0ATe>S> Bobby il.iv! * Mr rl 1 G. Aldrieb, R, .1. Henley, » Coluti··«. Jo««· u ni m cite, Cenwai and le- -.-i. '·'¦ ? ·' '¦¦ ? bea·«, 28 d?*. Eve ?. So an rig at d illy M its IC I Ito«TOR'g High lass i.m-lnuou« Performance, l'Itti« (lits So :i t ? ?. ß BOB. |·?««?« Hilt's. .1..hi. I. MillUuii. "tiiiu. Hunt· lucimi," < lui*. II. Welles ? « ·>.. In i r. n.rlo Lemattre." PAVOR ¦·. UH .. ?,????? PICTURES. DIXON. IU»WI .-. ????? re. Rube»; SMITH A UUI I.ER Mu»l let: «W OTHER ;" II I PASTOR'S tuMIMois PERFORM VX'B. Citilo to 11 ?*. ?. Seat«, SO und SO crut«. MII.TOY AM» DOLLIB MIDI. ES. *4?. ??'????.?? 88th Bti 1 t, aeai lumi «a a- t., OPEN DAILY i'V '"·' MONDAYS. II .-·. ¦' I -k. COLUMBIA CNIVERSIT1 »a. ¦-. ? ROLAS. WAI.I.A« ?"· ?\ ALlaACK'S LAST 3 WEEKd ¦ve« - 15 Mai vv«m. aag To--<Uy. MISS .11 I.I* ARTH1 I«. su, ; rl .VIS IRDEN, la A LAD* «H' O.I ILI PI ?1 EHER A PIELDI ?a« ? U IIIIKH ? FIELDS Sun. MAT. Webei .·. Field» Scor« Again. MAT. TO-DAT. POlSaE CAPE, I'o-i'iY, MAT. OK THE WORsi I««»ll\. s IT. In 01 1··"? Pock«! in fll'H AVE. THEATRE, adwap «nd ¡ftth-M. Mil AYE. EDWIN KNOWLRS. ".>¦. ALEX 4YDRA In Rl hard ? , j. VIAHDA ? ??.?\*?»??. \ ixitiil with » compe« \···-. in Os, Evening», I "." Ral ? it. .·· -j ST« 1. and ¿at W Trltn.n« »J !l- ni a iv mla-a- regular les until S o'clock p. ni vi "' 1 »tl ¦·.¦¦ ». e. ...r gM Bt 183 «.-.li-itve.. cor. 13th »: M.i.-v». Stri ave. au·', utii st.¡ li- C lumbui ¿.e new VVeel IDS West 4M near Btl « 83 Baal 14th 281 weal tíd-at between 7th and «th ave«. |Sg ::.. ,:¦¦ jsl Id «..·.. t····.·.«· .-n M h »nd t t ii »ts. ?·. ». near ni«t-s·.. 1.708 lai av«. un Wi it.; 880 3d ive., Beer llst-r·.. K.i .'.·! .'.ve 810 Hlee. k·" st .?.'.? lll««eckef st ; - 'i-ave. :.«" ??««.« rSth -i.:I.H-l 8d nv.·.. '_· .¦t-.· :'. ira ;.«>i« «d «\.· Jje East ?·.«: 1.921 3 « L··:«'·.' .Ti-.ive» ¦« ? TR ST. THEATRE near Sth a< Mau I 14 wniii'w mcK. Blw Hit. AN IRISH OBSTLER ADVERTISEMENTS and nibecrlptloTui fo !.. ei« ·: .it tr. dr i'·, srn Hfl ». ? ·. ? 24 d.^r ?.?p?? .if Hal ?!.. until '.> o'cl eh menta p d e following bra tioräcs «no CftniOfrfs. WE HAVE IT. My paten« Bafet] r Leek for BROUQHAriS. Atnu'lute pi lection f.t.tu thieve». AUSO, Tir.-aKj. VI.· run Opera H'.isee, \v«i^ nette«, RuckawBys «'.unie CMtS) it. ? ijrts, >|,· i.-ra, «i.iillng 1'rjp«. HiI.-m: SHOW NOVELTTRS. 141 le 1.V2 Eaat glst-st, ht Lestegl u BBd 3.1-avee. H. M. STIVERS. VDVRRTISXRRNTa »ad «ab« riptloaa 10 Th« sheas ? ???? I t tl «·.. No 1.S43 Hr ? ??*. .J.1 .i er n rUi 11 "i »? un 11 3 p. m.; «di ""*; ment« reeelrsd ut tas teliowlns brauch ·· ai r'Kviur offlfe t..tee until H o/clech î» m.. vl¿ : 2G,? Mh-ivj , »¦ <·· cor. Sadst.; 152 Cih-av.·., cor. 12thst.; Ma·!». SlB-a»··
Transcript

GUY FAWKES DAY.

THB GUNPOWDER PLOT FROM TWO

POINTS OF VIEW.

WHAT WAS THE GUNPOWDER PLOT? TheTredit'.i nal Story Tested by Origina! Evidence.By John Gerard. Octavo; pp. xlv. ZS&. London:Oagood, Mcllvaine & Co.

WHAT THE GUNPOWDER PLOT WAB. By Sam-uel RaWson Gardiner. Octavo; pp. vili, 20s.

Longman«. Greon & Co.

For some timo a controversy ha* been taking

place In periodicals and newspapers on the true

history of the Gunpowder Plot, which, as If he

were Its arch conspirator, popular tradition as¬

sociate« with the name of Ouy Fawkes To ex¬

plain the nature of that controversy is a diffi¬

cult task. For one thing, It has little relation

to the popularly accredited traditions which Guy

Fawkes Day perpetuate«. Tradition, or, tn other

words, history. In so far as it ever establishesItself In the popular mind, is persistently pict¬

uresque. Out of the crufio material of the rastIt builds up a wonderful, diversified and brilliant

spectacle of heroey», genluaes and villains.and

Fawkes has been par excellence the villain of

English tradition. The credulous human mind

sets itself no limit in conceiving th« ramifica¬

tions of his conspiracy with his coreligionist«,and the havoc that conspiracy wemld have

wrought had it not In the eleventh hour been

deteoted. To understand the present contro¬

versy, however, one must dlemlss this dramatic

legend from the mind. Hlatory, in «o far as the

term stands for the consensus of the learned. Is

pruealc: it refuses to find in Ouy Fawkes a

blood relation to IUue Beard; to believe him, In

any «enee, a chosen engine of the Roman Cath¬

olic Church, or to suppose that the conspiracy

associated with his name was In any danger of

diverting England for a moment from her Prot¬

estant career. On all these points the presentcontroversialists are agreed.Indeed, It would be easier to define the pointe

on wht.-h they are agreed thin those on which

they differ. They all believe, for instance, that

In the year 1603 a «mall group of Roman Cath-

oftc gentlemen, one CeUsby In the forefront,

and. enll«ted among his lieutenants, Thomas

Percy, Francl« Treeham and Guy Fawkee. con¬

spired to «trike what they thought would be a

great blow against th« then existing Protestant

Ministry and Government, and that their plot

Involved the use of a large amount of gun- |powder; that they entered Into this plot, not

from any love of bloodshed for its own sake,

but from the misguided notion that they could.

profit thus the Juet cause of their coreligionistsIn England; that the Roman Catholic body of

England never could have been got to sanction

and that no faction of the Church ever did eanc-

tlon the conspiracy; that though it was disclosed

to at least one priest in the confessional, there

1« no absolute proof that any priest approvedit, or, except under the seal of the confessional,had cognizance of it; and that the report which jwas circulated as to It« discovery Is In some

particulars inadequate and disingenuous.Within the limits of thee« articles of belief in¬

genious students of history have been able to

raiae three Questions: First.Did these Irresponsi¬ble conspirators, as Is generally believed, Intend

the demolition of the House of Lords at the

opening of Parliament, the destruction thereby

of the King, the Lords and the Commone, the

capture of the only possible heirs of the throne

and the declaration of e Roman Cathollo re¬

gency? Second.Does circumstantial evidence

point to the connivance of two Jesuit priests.Fathers Garnet and Greenway, in the con¬

spiracy? Third-Did the Prime Minister, Salis¬

bury, us!ne Catesby and his lieutenants as

dupes, originally instigate their conspiracy, or,

if n>t that, direct ar.d amplify It to Its linai

iss-'ie, In order to gain Justification out of the

plot, for further antl-Cathoiic législation*It Is only natural that a man's rel'.RUus sym¬

pathies should Influence In some measure his

consideration of these ijuestlons. but It is diffi¬

cult to see how his final decision can In any

way affect his estimates of either the Roman

Catholic or the Protestant Church. No rational

man Judges large bodies of Christians by one

priest or one Prime Minister. The enthusiastic

churchman, however, does not always take this

matter so phll<*>sophlcally. Some months ago

an English Jesuit, Father Gerard, evidently dis¬

posed to see in the answer of modern Englishscholarship to these questions an Injustice to his

church, put forth an honest and plausible treat-

Ik lee on the other side. In this he has made out

Im a strong case for the two priests. He «o ln-

W tcrprets the Jesuit point of view that, at least

for a time, he places the reader in intellectualsympathy with it. On this charge he tempusone to «ubstitute for the confessedly hypotheticalverdict of history, which stigmatizes the men

as guilty, the more lenient Scotch verdict, not

proven. On the other two questions his posltlemI« hard to define. Though he believes Catesbyand hla fellowe quite Innocent of any Intention

to blow up the House of Lords, he offers no

theory of hi» own to explain away their extraor¬

dinary course of action both before and afterthe capture of Guy Fawkes. For a perfectlyIntelligible hypothesis, quite credible enough to

satisfy modern English scholars, he proposts to

substitute absolute Ignorance and vacuity of

mind. The most he succeeds In doing Is to rais··

a suspicion that Catesby. Percy and Eawke«were not as ehrewd and subtle as they ai<»

usually supposed tc have been. When he turns

to the question of Sal!sbury"s responsibility forthe plot, his position is still weaker. At every

- opportunity he Insinuate» his charge«, but h«nowhere adduce« a scrap of proof to substan¬tiate them. The only suspicion he tempts one tu

entertain rests on the possibility that Salisburysagaciously delayed the disclosure of Oatesby'spurpose« till the times were ripe for It. In other

words, th« etatesman may have allowed the ene¬

mies of hi» King and hi« Ministry to play Into

his own handaFather Gerard's defects a« a student of his¬

tory are precisely those of Bhakesp« are'e do-crier*, the Baconians. He is exceeding IngeniousIn discovering difficulties In accepted interpreta¬tions of history, but most of hi« difficult!«.·« aris«·

from his inability to put himself ImaginativelyInto a past epoch and Judge it by its own stand¬ards and in the light of its own circumstances.He quite forgets, for instance, that In 1606 the

region about Parliament House was not the

sa:¿.e frequented resort it is to-day; he forg>-tsthat there was ever a time when gentlemen "f

pleading address were capable of violent and

dangerous conspiracy and rebellion. He seeiuj

Ignorant of the fact that It was no mark of

extraordinary duplicity for an official In th · daysof the Stuart« to receive bribe« from fr>relgngovernment«. The duplicity would have lain In

returning a fair equivalent. There are but a

few random indicanone r>f Father Gerard's In¬

aptitude for the study of hlsu.ry. In place ofa tra-nt-d historical Imagination he substitut··«

an Incorrigible enthusiasm.It is thl« volume which Dr. 8. R. Gardiner has

get himself to «uiswer. The rejoinder, It muet h-

confused, la hard reading. Without frequent ref¬erence to Father Gerard it would be unlntelllKl-ble. Nor is it« tone Ingratiating. On the con¬

trary, it la dry and dogmatic. Even estlmateelaa purely legal evidence, and quite apart from

any questlcm of literary power and psaseasl««appeal, Mr. Gardiner*» mon«>graph la defective,for he falls to take sufficiently in«/> account th«fact that CatboUc rnodeu or thoug-l.t are not

Protestant modes of thought, and falla, therefor«,to do Justice to the morality of the Jesuit SsSfSSseeOn a subject of this sort, how* ver, Dr. «¿ardim-ris by far the beat of living authorities n,. know«the fact« and their whole historical setting. H«is trained and naturally <v*ol headed in the In¬terpretation of facts, and he is never tesnptedto p;ay the advocate. It ?« ef no mtie atajalfl«cane«, therefore, thst Mr. Gardiner, though h«·Invests the conspirators with no l'Ictur'-sque uc-

caeaoiie«, and 1» In no danger of burning GuyFawkes In effigy, yet ay-opis to the full Um«Mrth(edoa view· of Catesby'· plot, the two prle»ta'

implication tn It, Salisbury's freedom of respon¬

sibility for It, as those views are held by the

genera! consensus of modem English scholar¬

ship to-day.-*-

ROOKS OF THE WEEK.

ANOT*L3 ?G THE BATTLEFIELD. A History of the

Labor« r't th« Catholic SIMe/hoids in the Lste CivilWar By Oe.-rs· Barton, barge Svo. pp. 302 «Th·Catholic Art Publishing C"mr»ny.>

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DOK LtlSi· WIFE. A Romance of th· West Indica ByIJlltan Hlnmaa Phuey. ltiiiv. pa. S35. (L«m»on,Woirr· a ceo

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i: «; »? I any )

SOCIAL LIFE IN OLD VIRGINIA BEFORE THE WAR.· Nel« ·? Page vrìtn Ili latratlon« by Ih

>.··»» Ca<sata l'imo, pp, ?«·?. (Charle« Soribner*«sor ?

LDLLABY-LAND. Hon«« : Childhood. By Bogen«Field. Seid '«M by Kenneth Orábame ar.d I )u»trat»l

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·· ? :: ^.(, ??, G»? i'i. 1". Putnam'· ï+.na>

SHIRLEY. A Tala By Charletu 3ront« lUoatraStd b>r. H Townsead. Croe Í ; ? r..n. (O, P. Potnam'3 f

TKi; VENETIAN PAINTERS "F THE RENAISSANCBWith ..·. 1: '·· ? ··¦ ThelT Wi :k«. By li-fnn-? !'er»r.s r.

Third El:-.on With Tv«<::m fi ·?? rbotogravur· 1'.

lustra-ions, hvo, ag MB, ··; ? i itnam'l I :·«

THE CID ami EADuR. An.1 tbe Waning of the >< »

.ont :n ih« '· »t By H, Butler '*:.-irWe with ?·

lustri c. ?· rren Dto-? n^s by ?-·?? Santlaee a?t.*

''· ··.·:. tv ·;· .''.*-- (?. ?. ?????,a,.t?'» Son«;

AMBROI8E PARE and HIS TIMES, ISIO -ìr.no. By

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I-. ? ItiTHE HABITANT, And Oilier Fren'I. '**nr.ad:ar. Poema

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enok B. Oobura ivo, pp. 187. e*,, j» Putnam'«Bona

THE PROTEBTANT FAITH. e»R. SALVATION bv

BELIEF By Dw ghi Hinckley Olmstead, lSm·.

pi M) '',. P, Putnam ? ! " )DEFIANT HEARTS. By W, Helmburg Translated by

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F fcVrm Ä- Co.)WASHINGTON A Rational Erie iD HI« Cantoa By

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??? STORY «"'F THE PAlJCUNEfi. An Episode in

Colonial History By BanffttM ? Coett. «Yown «...

pp. uiu. ?; !' Pul asm · I us »

ON BLUE WATER. By Edmondo ?· Aiadeie Tran»latent ?- .tn· ·?. ?. Brown Illustrât««! ßtß, pp. ;>>7

«3 ? ? ?«

??? WAT TO THK W <>;>t; l'y swaleea she** 32?p?

M ~'¿ "' I· ·"'· I áV ''"¦¦*-

SHADOW« By M A. D. ?F··» «···· «¦» ?* «'

,ivp»:i:.: .? Dar.)HARVARD. ?» ?»·*'« "¦ "',' n"^rau' ,-rl1"· "

'«11« " pel·"«! ¦ '"''

iiiLPEOAltPB·« HARVEST. Bl Uur· E Bebard«BUI ;.''-,,.- 1ß? .. aw lÄtes e. Leuriei

.yKt'flìir"v.;--:^*VSfi "SCS»· Wajrnm.ll ¦"· mi»hny.iagaMsÏÏLORAKTd LETT»«* TO A FIUEMV IM

a??1ß?0^ WIUi IntrodurtloB ani Sote, h. Jam»« OrasiWi ,i ISm pp. 182. (T. T. Oowell ?-

THE POETI.'AL WORK* OF EUZARETH MR*g.BBOWNIKO With ? Périrait. Bro, pp. SOT. fit.e

Ma. ::. lian Cbmpaay.)iva KiiPVRK a Matrimonial Problem. By I.. B.

wi- · : New Editine Urne, pp ß» rUssgitmn·,

THBoUbEN'S HOTJHDg ANI- STAO MCNTin«; BE<Yi(.l.lx-nONS. By (»rd Rlbble-dal« VVIth aaita-Iroduciion on the Hediti y Mastership itv'Bdw* ··

Burrowa with Numen u« lllu«tratl«i» "« ·. PPx'.i. 818. (LoBrnaaaa Orten f. Co.1

RÍRD UFE A finid· lo Ih« Study of Our «'.inm-n

BU « B| Frank M. rrhapman II u)trat«<3 r»y Ernestgetea Thotam n. Sve, n ''···' ''· applet ß AC

IXKCOhS LITERARY OLLE« TI'-N For SchoRoom and Family Circi' n·.· j. r. M«·· "»**>·. IJrao,pp. G,?ß «Ameritan Boob «'-mitanyi

THE STATE RAILROAD COMMISSION.

The State Railroad Commission met in th«· com«

mlttee-room of th» Chamber ef Commerce yester¬day morning snd held. « pubi.«· hearing on the ap¬

plication «.f Die Metropolitan Street Railroad Cos»·«¿any for a rhangs of motive power from hors..-, to

underground electrlcltjr on a part of Its system.The preaMOBt, Ashley W. Cola, presided. Both tho

other Commissioners, Oeorge W. Dunn sad PrankM Haker, were present, The first motion to come

before the Commleelon was an application by thobat« nee« of the Kinetic steam motor for permis¬sion to ?-«· their motor on the Babylon (Long ]¦:ai<li Railroad De« «Ion wa« reserved No on«atmeared to oppose the application of the Metro¬politan Btreei Railroad Company, end li la likelythai consent will be given to change the motivepower from horse power to underground electricity'n Thirty-fourth «t., from Second sva to th«· EastHiver snd In M"··"· BlXth-Bt., between First andBecond avee. Th« Commission adjourned to meetIn Albany no»' Monday.

CLOSE OF THE ENGINEER» CONTENTION.The convention of th» American Society of Me¬

chanical Engineers bsld it» Anal session yesterdayOne <.f the papers by Oeorge Richmond proved tobe ur.uHually Intercalimi to the member·. It w»h

"Tberssodynamlcs Wlthoul the Calculua." Otherpapera read wer· "Electricity In Cotton Milla," byW. i". Smith Wbaley, Columbia, s. C "The Valua¬tion of Textile Manufacturing Property,'1 byCharles T. Main, Beaton; "A Hiny Boll ThreadingDevi.·*." by Jam«-r« Mafi.«es. BtwtngOekt, Vt. ; "AnA«wurata <"o*tkeei.lng; Byetem." by ?. M Morris..Cincinnati; "Th« Stevens Valva ';«ar.'· by AndrewFletcher, liobokm, .<¦ j "A Convenient Form ofvyirc-Tektlns Machine," by Arthur L. ??«·«. ??p.,,?-l>d. :.. V ¦·,'. Holler Retting," by <;. W Biseell,Alni«. Iowa; "Auaillarj Engine« ami Transmis¬sion Tovvrr in Naval VesselB," by Oeorge W.Dickie, Han Francisco, Cal.; ''Machine Mouldingwithout Hiri|,i.ii.? Plates," by ?, ??. Mumford,Rutherford, N. J.. "A H« r<^w M. foi tha TurretL*thc." by James Harinees, Kprlturneld, Vt., and

"Pustless Buildings." by C. J. Wood. Boston.Mas«. The «pring meeting of IROS will be heM at

Niagara Palls._CHAMES VETOED RY THE BISHOP.

ST. STEPHEN'S AND THE CHAPEL OF THE

ASCENSION MOVED WITHOUT THE

NECESSARY CONSENT. "WHI^HIS NOW REFUSED,

niehop Potter hs» refused to permit St. Stephen»pnrlsh to occupy the Chapel of the Transfiguration.In West Slxty-nlnth-at.. and the Church of the As¬

cension to move It« West Sido mission work to

HorattO-et In each Instance the change·» have

been practically accomplished, end or.e who Is well

verse.1 In ecclesiastical law said yesterday that

there SSSSSS to he nothing for these parlshe» to do

but to return to their former abiding place».At the me«iing of the Standing I ommlttee. of the

Diocese thl» week the Bishop Informed the Rev.

Dr. Morgan Dix. the chairman, and the other mem¬

bers of that body that ho refused the applicationof St. Stephen's Church, In Forty-slx:h-et., near

Klfth-ave., to remove to the building until recentlyoccupied as the (.'hapol of the Transfiguration, In

West sixty-nintii-st.. near the BoulevardThe Cllepel of the Transfiguration wa» founded

by the Ree. Dr. Ûeeirge H. Houghton, over twenty

year» ago. au ai uptown mission e.f the churchof the »ame name in East Twenty-nlnth-st. It

w«.· not especially prosperous, but within the pa»ttwo years it began to grow In numbers and zeal.

However, lust spring the vestry of th·· Church of

the Transfiguration «loci,led to dispose of the chapeland put tho proceed» of the »ale into the endow¬

ment fund of the parent church. The congregationof the chapel made an un»uoc«-n»ful effort to pur¬

chase tho prop'Tty and establish an Independentparish, but tho property wa» bought by St. Ste¬

phen'» parish for BRASS, and the congregation of

the chapel secured a storeroom In Amstordam-ave.,where they have continued their servues, with

th» Rev. Uwion Carte« Rich, formerly vicar of the

chapel, a» palesi in charge.St. Stephen'· Church, the Rev. Charle» R. Treat,

rector, took poestwstos of the purchased buildingin October, defending upon »'-curing tho roneent of

the Bishop. But there were protests from rome

members of the parish, who wished to have theirchurch rebuilt near its former situation. In Korty-B.xth-st.. and from tw> of tho Eplacopal churches,vrhtoh are established near the acquired building.

ChrnVI Church. In the Boulevard· nnd Seventy-flrst-st.. and A.I Angel»' Chifreh, la «Vest EnJ-.v. e. u:«d

Elahty-flr«t-«t The Bev. Dr. Shlpman. rector ofChrist i.'tiuroii, who i» a member of the StandingCommittee, ah<1 the Rev/. Dr. Townsead, rector olA'.l Angels, N'iti) protected that th>re «raa no room

In the netshborhood for atiot-ier Episcopal churchwhich would have serrici «am« typ« as theirown. T.-.e fact ti.at th·· member« of TransfigurationChapel did not unite «rithBt, St.*piien's congregationlens,, though) to ¡ia\e lud .ve «hi with th« Bisnop,

ligo vei/x-d by Bit!I'Hrlsh of th" Ascension, l"!fth-a\e. anel11 e otiier change v«t/-wd ;>y ??*???? Potter in that

Tenth-at.. which recently discontinued the Chapelof the Comforter, In Qreenwleh-et., en ? transferred:·« W'e«: SI·.ß mission work to a building which it

irehaaed at No M Morati»-«·. The R»v. l»r. B. V.

De Costs, rector of tn« Church >f Bt .lohn th« K\aii-

¦jellst, put in a vigorous protest, de· taring that i>>engaging In work In th» Horatio«! building theChar·«! of the Comforter *»¦ Meroachtng on blanarleh w.irk. Dr. Do ? "osta» objection «ras forti«Pel hv pr ite«·« from 'he Bev. Philip ?. ?. Prow a,

vi ar of fit LnkS'S Chapel, of Trinity Church, In

Hudson··!., ani from the Be,-. O S. Ito·-ho. rector

Of St roter'.« Church. ?? V.'est Twentieth··.. TheBishop decided aralnst the parish of the Ascension,wMch I«, t.iorefore, left vrl'h a mission hoiue on

Ita íiand» wbl ;h It ha» »»? forbidden by the Bishopto use. ni. II Will ?.??? tn rem ve Uh West Bid«wjrk to *lie ,,M rjreenvrlch-et. »He or to some prop¬erty near by.

METROPOLITAN TE11PLF ANNIVERSARY.

THE -90KWAXD MOVEMENT" riVK ????? AC»4>-

PROORBBB Of ???G WOBK.

The Metropolitan Tempi« Beventi -ave nnd Four-

te«ntli-et.. yesterday celebrated t.'.o fifth anni. <r-

»ary of a» "Forward Movement,*' or the throwing

open of It» door» Cor nightly servie·« and mission

work.Tnere wa» a religious service at 4 O'clo k. ai whl-h

the Rev, I >r. F M. North ani Ut« Re», Dr John Hall

assisted the P.ev. s l'ajke« Cadmaa, pastor of tn»

Metropolitan Ten] >.

The anniversary meottna l< * ataos at ? e/clockIn the sventi ?. sad In Itided addre»»e» by J'..»:. y

Edvard ''. ?? Iresr«, th« Rev Di Jame« M. Bu h-ley, th« R«v l»r i*. I. Oebon, the itev. Dr V M

North and J. M Cornell, i-ad»r of the Templeconfer· ·

Th« ?« ? s Parke« Cadman t+?? th« «?· ual r«»-

port, »hewing that during ih« y»«»r over 2 ·'<·> i"r·

vices w»-re i. with a total attendane« of tn·»·

hundred ami fifty thouaai er« « G?« renvoi«?...·· :. iw a membership of l.Qul In mparU t. with.*.: two and s half >· ira «so Th· vesti h r

connected «rltS rh« Temple, whl h e naia >d of.Ixty-two ii>: ·.« .. r«ai «u. >. novi hu .->' :.o:nt««r».

ROCKEFELLERS WAST FAIR VALUATION'S).

TfOBT ASK BCHOOBj TRUBTEflEg TO ABCgflsTAlM ?? ?

V/.I.PF. eiF THBTB ggTATsM IM TUE MAN

SKR PROVIDED BT LAW.

joli l> »r.d Wintern Rochefetler, through fhe«r

oosnssot, Howard H Mor»·, of North Tarrytown,hive tnk»n additional action tow ird Obtaining a

fair valuation of their »stn-e» In the township of

M< ml Pleasant, In Weetcheeter County. They h»v»

a'..-«sa.ly «nke-n i»gal measurea to aseen ii¡. the true

? of their property In the town, and now Mr

Me>r«e hi» served notice on the s. ? .,; u tees of

th», varie·«)» districts of the township In which th»

kefellar property is situated thai they claim a

r· luetlon In the valuation of their real propertyí r ??«· reason 'hat the valuation of ich pro¡,-

arty eannoi he »- ertalned 'rom the inm .1

n.· iit r· ., -if the t -.. .·· .1 .-¦· '. an erri r 01 p il -.

tf.k» or the perl of t,·;.· tow.·, us.- «»or« In th«

»crlption ¡.1 .1 valuation of «aid property." '¡:.·>,.

· 11,.· trustees sscartali ine ti ¦¦ valu· of

roperty ¦»¦· provided by tew at.d hav· it ae-

·, .1 u ordlngly.H ;..,s been ihe .i-oini custom of the school tru«-

tee« to base their ass« «smonta on ih» town assess

ment» In this «ano. the Rockefellers da lare the)axe entirely too high end Ul equal.

?

AH EXCHANGE'S BIGBT To I.XIST.

AMsTfTEB is a Kt-'IT BT TUB «¡e«·. RNMENT UMDER

??« ???-???ß? LAW.

Omaha. Nob., Dec. ?. On behalf of tie· membersof tho South «'mahn. Llv« st«N-k Eschai .· :!·' St·

ton.»·>.. bn.\e» pied an Mwwar in the United States

«'ourt to the sull "t th« Oovernmenl >f lbs United

States ir which tti·· Oovernment »e»k* t..

dissolve tii» Uve Stot-k Exchange under tho Anti-

Trust law- of the L'nlted States Th«· casa 1» con·

Bidered of the utmost importan. throughout th·«

country, as it involves the. validity of every live

stork eT-e-hange« and a. greet variety of businessestablishments nil over the United state«

The answer *»U out thnt it I* the customary

practice ..r all cities and commercial i>ointn to formaxchanges or HoartiH of Trail·«, to facilitate th»

making of Mich places a tra.il« centre·. Hin h ex-

changea are formed by dealers In stocks, bonds,

grain, cotton and other agricultura] producía Uve

.;to(-kt>, «'?p, minerals and In limosi »very trade In

comroodltlea Th«· anawar allégea that such ai-so-

r-intlons do not engage In boa,1 . s. lui simply «.re-

Bcrlbe rules and provide facllltlei for the traaaac-tlon of business, ami carh membai1 Is left free to

compete arltb th». other members for the fair ami

juHt conduct of ble business.Referring te th« Union Bloch Yards Company

and the Omaha Stork V'arila, the nnewer denle«that it 1.« a publie market, but ullages Usai it i» a

)>riv»t«· concern; that Ihn rattlo Bhlpped In are

¡.-¦..? In pens owned by th« company ami remainthere umil sold, and Ihe commission merchanttelling ??.« k hsJ no further control ?.?«·? tii>· dispo¬sition ot the si... k. The answer denle· thai the«lock yard« afford the only available place in theterritory for the sals of stoch, and ai.»«!- that thegreater portion ar» «old by negotiation· conductedaway from the ..aril'« ami the Exchange, it ¡4

also denied thai the buslneaa <·G commission mor-inti in commerce partakes of an hiterateta nat¬

ili··, within the constitutional meaning. A denialalso mad« thai parsons not member« who «hip

:ii 1; to Bouth Otnsba aio compelled t.. r»>,ì?|? 1,,

oihtT markets, hut li 1« alleged that thej aroofferi'ti every facility f.ir making sales. Th·· iMend-um« de·:.)- unlawful combination.Th«« Exchange «vrw its light to maintain or¬

ganization, ami that it Is not compelled to dealwith luiy member win. has been expelled for m Is-conduct or who le threatening to destroy the Ex-'.-iiikc from personal motives. Th answer con-

¦ hui»« wim the statement that. Instead of hinder¬ing <>r retarding the owners of iiv«· Block in th«. Baleof their Htot k. th«· purpose of th«· (exchange le tufaollltate <-u<-h salo and to pron.ot·· an«) Increasethe VOlUtn· Of hiisln··»» ilone at the Btoeh y ????.

"

[NDICTBD IJ1CDKR A bTATE TRUST I*A\V.Chicago, Dec. 3-True Mill have b«»ti voted

under Un; Illinois Antl Trust tew by the Oraad JuryairaiiiMt free prosalnaeit ß;·>?.· repair mAin.factur¬er». The eosaptelat »'ar. made by Allan C. Bellech,a hardware sserohant, and follows a civil suit for

IM.OUQ damages, |a which Mi. Bellech charged theihr manufacturare with having conspired m ruinhi* business by formine s combination lo fores im

the Mice .! stove repairs. The case i< laid lo bethe Orsi of it* kind steca the Antl-Trusi In« wentInto effect Bellech In his complaint alleges thatwhen the e-ombnatiori was formed he u .·, invitedt«· join but refused, ami im« been oomoeUlad topay retail prices a» ? result, with a conseuue.nllose of a large part of hi« business.

BLANTHER'S CONFESSION FALBE*

BE WAS IN ATUANTA WHB.N THE MURDER OF

WHICH rjCBRAcTT STANDS 0)?*??«?G??)WAS G?????G.?.

Atlanta. Oa., Dee. 3..Joseph E Blanther. better

known a.« Arthur D. Forbes, who was manager and

proprietor of the Southern Purchasing Agency in

Atlanta and who recently committed »ulclde In a

.iunty Jail In Texa», was In Atlanta on the day

when the murder of Blanche Lamont and Minnie

William» occurred in San Francisco. Thia state¬

ment Is made by perrons in Atlanta who knew

Forbe» well and had business dealings with him. To

support their atstements the books and records

which were In Fe>rbe»'» office hero havo tieen con-

»ulted. and it Is ehown that between April 1 and

April 14. 1S°S. the time of the two murdor» in San

Francisco, Forbe» was here and doing business with

Kelly Brothers ft Co. end other firms If these

statements are true, and there appears no reason to

doubt the proofs submitted. Forbes, aliad Blanther.could not have possibly b*»«n the murderer, and the

declaration made In a written eonfes«lon admittingthat b« kill, d the young women Is faineMrs. Blanther, tlio widow ef the suicide, has been

making «very effort to show that her husband was

the real murderer, and tiiat Theodore Durrant. now

under «entenoa of death for the crime. Is an Inno¬cent man. Mr«. Planther, who wa.« r'eceived by her

husband, is doubtless sincere In what she says, but

her whole course of action Is based on the alleged«rrftten confession, which, it Is said, was found on

the person of Mianther when ho committed suicideIn the Texas Jail.

XrtD Publications.

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,·.?? Ma "IJf· of Sir Kenelm Gt?^?,·· reçttntly p'ib-lUhed ti e A'ithiir j,re»«nt*d a ? rtra'.t of a sev«nt«enth-century "amateur.' Dealing wit), much tli« salue ;¦'.·'¦ 1

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THE DIARY OF MASTER WILLIAM SILENCE.? ????G·? OF SHAKESPEARE AND OF ELIZ¬

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THF ?ISO S STORY ROO s;.

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IS Now BEADY*.

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lit» Bright Hh··!-»." ? mma/i.-e e>f Mante l'irlo, a phll"«nphlOBl rfigloiis «t.ttT ·' IBS ·t??.·??\?..:?. «fltUled "?,,?

is Kt.ii'.w Him," »iii'ii »nKge«t^.| to sienalosrici theMm "f »rlttng "<,'"o Vadls"; a hk.-t. ?·, entitled 'Tartur Captivity' th» g'-rtu of "With ?'.· and Sword" andthe ether valaasee el the «real truogy; "Be ThouBeSaseS." ft Irgeiut Sf Krlehn»; tiunitirwii r..'velette.

entitled "Th«t Third W.trnan." «te.

LIT 08 follow him

Translated from the· polish of Henryk Blenkle-î.ríes by Jeremiah Curtln. Iflmo, cloth, si".*with photogravure frontispiece by Bdrnund11. Oair.lt, G?) cents,

OVER lSO.Omi COPlgSJ OP

"QIO VAD1S"

Authnrtaetl linahrlited TraosiaUin

p? «JEREMIAH CURTTNBAVB AXePJsADT BBBM gOLO.

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seat In the basal ganglia of th« brain, aepaeate from butassociated with all th» other faciline« of tn· brain.

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?

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MISS WATSON «nd Mies PORBEl iP«v Meet).Mi"« Jli.lA A. Wli.T.FY iH"m« School, Primary.

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'IXHIANSIMMER.

HOYT·« ???????, 24TH ST, SEAR BW AT.Cm., S:SO \u-s Wed. and Te-da» 8:1S

????? A «.TKAXI'ER IX SEW YORK.HOY I'S A 9TRAXGER IX XEW YORK.1«H>TH PERFORMA Vf·" DEC. 15 iSOUvENIRS».

Herall Bor ??«*.RKT.'-JRICE'S

t·. e >

"??!?"Tin:

5 M ¦- w.FRF.XCHF'RKXt'H

1 S T> tiy. 2 16,M HO."M HD."

HARLEM , Bv·. t ".·-· Mal T· ¡a» 2. (taorssHAItl.KM Edward«·' I- t 1 ;¦!-··. ????ß?

OPERA nui su. ira Co.. "ix TOWS.Next Ween 'TUMBERLAND ·ß1" Origin«! PTodeetJe·.

»y AIKVINi.» PLACE THEATRE. F.\ea o:U. Mi; f êBTRACSS' beautiful ·¦*-«··· WALDMEISTER,

JULIE KOPACST «nd Star i"i«t.

KNICKERBOCKER. BROADWAY POR. 88TR SfLEVENrXOP, S3« ??????? TO-DAY, 2:1a.

SEI ·??· CROWDED M< NTH.MR. *. G. riOODXVIX.?? ??»*???G»? CITIFEN.MR. ?. G. GOODWIN.AS AMERICAN CITIZEN.

4-? AXXA ?ELD'S S veltr. 0 «at hit.KOBTKR AXXA HELIPS 1I-0S rtlg'.itty.? ????- ..7.1 Ott»·! Porelgn BU«

? «V [ Next Sunday. Dee Stl 2G? r'*>l"*I.ARADM.. BOc OONrERT OA1 KIEL'S" Itl-tiTRA,Vat t>-1av. I ANNA HELO »nj «::h«-r f » -.im S'.ira.

LYCEI M THEATRE. * .· a SSd-st. Begins Siel,liVIHI M THEATRE. Daniel ? -inn Msil«|«SLYCEI M THEATRE. e'atlnee« Sat.

???? l'RINCESS IMI TUR IltTTI ???,?.THE PR ? BJCESS AMI Till". Ill I'TE H ELY.

By th» »«uh r ' "The Amai ...-.' Sweet Lavend r," etc?',?'?? TUESDAY »? 3 ¦.-' -It-.

I.5.ITI HF. oh Tin: oimtiestkaAMi ITS INSTRUMENTS ?

WM. J. HEM)ERsO>, ESQ.ILL! «TH *.TK.n JIY ?? ? % M ERIC??

SYMPHONY olilHIiMIU. Givenunder th« tuapl «> f theIait.·»- CetlegS <t Mc- ··.

s»jts nay be seemed at bos eSfea

METROPOLIT V\ OPERA Hot SB.RECORD I.IHVI) UONCERT.

:-' . HE SERIES.SIXDAY. DEC. V BilB P. tL

Soldi,GaVBlSUkXÌ.r>Y,

PUONO-15LAUVELTJACOBT· .DEMPSBY,

MANA'S!-'Mr NT K. E. JOHN8TON &. CO.BTEINWAT PIANOS USED.

METROPOLITA*! OPERA HOI SE.The Suli»crl|itlon sul«·· fur th.· Sen»ou o|

GRAND OPERAIn French, (irrmnn. una Hallan.

WALTER DAMROaCU mi il' « . A. El.LIS,MOW open «?? th» Metroi U»n Oper» II is«, a redue-t' n : Bft«eej r«T «sat vv... o« «ases te «ubscrthan forti.«· ?-· aa .n.

Il IMI \TI V\ B> ¿s «

M IMI ???*M A MI ITTARlì wa> ?: ilô!.

Mat. ? lap, MlHis ?.? ? iii; i'.i.H.i:.His LITTLE Dull«.?.his in p.e mux.e.

lieo. eth. RtCSerda a;.: ... ... .:. M\ BOYS."

NATIO\\L ISTH AUTUMN EXHIBITION.ACADEM1 Mow Open iy sad !-:v.:..-ig.

tuDESIGN. ? W ili Av«.Ft»· Exhibition «if I'tun* of Ne« Acsdem) Hulldlsg.

PUCASL'RE PALACE. 881 IJ0ATe>S>Bobby il.iv! * Mr rl 1 G. Aldrieb,

R, .1. Henley, » Coluti··«. Jo««· u nim cite,Cenwai and le- -.-i. '·'¦ ? ·' '¦¦ ? bea·«, 28 d?*.

Eve ?. So an rig at d illy M its IC

I Ito«TOR'g High lass i.m-lnuou« Performance,l'Itti« (lits So :i t ? ?. ß BOB.|·?««?« Hilt's. .1..hi. I. MillUuii. "tiiiu. Hunt·lucimi," < lui*. II. Welles ? « ·>.. In i r. n.rloLemattre." PAVOR ¦·. UH .. ?,?????PICTURES. DIXON. IU»WI .-. ????? re. Rube»;SMITH A UUI I.ER Mu»l let: «W OTHER ;" II I

PASTOR'S tuMIMois PERFORM VX'B.Citilo to 11 ?*. ?. Seat«, SO und SO crut«.

MII.TOY AM» DOLLIB MIDI. ES.

*4?. ??'????.??

88th Bti 1 t, aeai lumi «a a- t.,OPEN DAILY i'V '"·' MONDAYS.

II .-·.¦' I -k.

COLUMBIA CNIVERSIT1 »a. ¦-. ? ROLAS.

WAI.I.A« ?"·?\ ALlaACK'S

LAST 3 WEEKd¦ve« - 15 Mai vv«m. aag To--<Uy.

MISS .11 I.I* ARTH1 I«.su, ; rl .VIS IRDEN, la

A LAD* «H' O.I ILI PI

?1 EHER A PIELDI ?a« ?U IIIIKH ? FIELDS Sun.

MAT. Webei .·. Field» Scor« Again. MAT.TO-DAT. POlSaE CAPE, I'o-i'iY,MAT. OK THE WORsi I««»ll\. s IT.

In 01 1··"? Pock«! I« in

fll'H AVE. THEATRE, 1· adwap «nd ¡ftth-M.Mil AYE. EDWIN KNOWLRS. ".>¦.

ALEX 4YDRA In Rl hard ? , j.VIAHDA ? ??.?\*?»??.\ ixitiil with » compe« .· \···-. in Os,

Evening», I "." Ral ? it. .·· -j

ST« 1. and ¿at

W

Trltn.n«»J !l-

ni a iv mla-a-regular

les until S o'clock p. ni vi "' 1 »tl ¦·.¦¦ ». e.

...r gM Bt 183 «.-.li-itve.. cor. 13th »: M.i.-v». Stri ave.au·', utii st.¡ li- C lumbui ¿.e new VVeel IDSWest 4M near Btl « 83 Baal 14th -· 281 wealtíd-at between 7th and «th ave«. |Sg ::.. ,:¦¦ >¦ jslId «..·.. t····.·.«· .-n M h »nd t t ii »ts. ?·. ». nearni«t-s·.. 1.708 lai av«. un Wi it.; 880 3d ive., Beerllst-r·.. K.i .'.·! .'.ve 810 Hlee. k·" st .?.'.? lll««eckef st ;

- 'i-ave. :.«" ??««.« rSth -i.:I.H-l 8d nv.·.. '_· .¦t-.· :'. ira

;.«>i« «d «\.· Jje East ?·.«: 1.921 3 « L··:«'·.' .Ti-.ive»

¦« ?TR ST. THEATRE near Sth a< Mau I14 wniii'w mcK.

Blw Hit. AN IRISH OBSTLER

ADVERTISEMENTS and nibecrlptloTui fo!.. ei« ·: .it tr. dr i'·, srn Hfl ». ? ·. ?

24 d.^r ?.?p?? .if Hal ?!.. until '.> o'cl ehmenta p d e following bra

tioräcs «no CftniOfrfs.WE

HAVE

IT.

My paten« Bafet] 1· r Leek for

BROUQHAriS.Atnu'lute pi lection f.t.tu thieve».

AUSO,Tir.-aKj. VI.· run Opera H'.isee,\v«i^ nette«, RuckawBys «'.unie CMtS)it. ? ijrts, >|,· i.-ra, «i.iillng 1'rjp«.

HiI.-m: SHOW NOVELTTRS.141 le 1.V2 Eaat glst-st, ht Lestegl u BBd 3.1-avee.

H. M. STIVERS.

VDVRRTISXRRNTa »ad «ab« riptloaa 10 Th« t» sheas? ???? I t tl «·.. No 1.S43 Hr ? ??*.

.J.1 .i er n rUi 11 "i »? un 11 3 '· p. m.; «di ""*;ment« reeelrsd ut tas teliowlns brauch "¦ ·· ai r'Kviurofflfe t..tee until H o/clech î» m.. vl¿ : 2G,? Mh-ivj , »¦ <··

cor. Sadst.; 152 Cih-av.·., cor. 12thst.; Ma·!». SlB-a»··

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